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Colonist 


Showers , 
high 17 

Weather Detail* 
on Pane 2 


No. 221 — 120th Year 


Vancouver Inland's leading newspaper since 1858 

Victoria, British Columbia, Saturday, September 2, 1978 


15c Daily, 30C Sunday 


Jobless aid goes to job aid 



Cullen 

‘stop spntn-feed' 


OTTAWA (CP) - The ftxj 
eral government was 
damned and praised Friday 
for its proposals to reduce the 
number of unemployment in¬ 
surance claimants .by about 
10 per cent and to increase 
spending on job creation. 

Unemployment insurance 
slashes, at a time when a 
million are jobless, would be 
a “kick in the gut'* to the 
unemployed and to seasonal 
workers in the economically 
depressed Atlantic provinces 
salt) Newfoundland Conser 
vative James McGrath 

His Tory colleague, Sin¬ 
clair Stevens of Ontario, said: 
“Thank God they realize 
their unemployment insur 
ance program is overly 
lax.” 

But he critici/ed the Job 


$710 million slotted 
to create positions 


creation measures which 
would not be ready in lime to 
help ease the anticipated high 
unemployment rate this win 
ter. 

Bud Cullen, federal minis¬ 
ter of employment* Friday 
announced proposals for 
sharp cuts in the unemploy 
ment insurance program in a 
move “to stop spoon feed 
ing” 

The Cullen proposals would 
require legislation to become 
law, and bills probably would 
be introduced in the fall ses¬ 
sion of Parliament, unless it 


was dissolved for a federal 
election Parliament is to re¬ 
sume Oct. 10. 

He coupled his proposal for 
major cost-cutting surgery 
on the unemployment insur¬ 
ance program with an an¬ 
nouncement of plans to spend 
$710 million on job-creation in 
the 1970-00 fiscal year 

Hardest hit by the proposed 
changes to the unemploy 
ment insurance program 
would be young persons, sea 
sonal workers and those re¬ 
turning to the labor force 
after a long absence. Also 


penalized would be repeating 
claimant*. 

Benefits would be reduced 
and the government also pro 
poses to move toward “spe¬ 
cial recovery from high-in 
• ome unemployment 
insurance claimants whose 
gross income, including un¬ 
employment Insurance, is 
more than $22,000 in any cal¬ 
endar year.’*' 

Cuts in the unemployment 
insurance program would re¬ 
sult in savings of $580 million 
in the 1976-86 fiscal year. Cul¬ 
len said. The $710 million to 
be set aside for employment 
strategy* in that year “would 
come from $570 million in 
cash expenditures, $100 mil¬ 
lion in foregone tax revenue 
aw $40 million in unemploy - 
Page 2—Cash-switch 


Oil fever grips market 
over Dome Arctic digs 


Oil fever gripped the Toronto Stock 
Exchange Friday as shares of Dome 
Petroleum Ltd. and Gulf Canada Ltd . 
partners in Beaufort Sea exploration, 
traded at high levels. But the companies 
declined to comment on the significance 
of drilling in two wells. 

Trading in the shares of both com¬ 
panies was halted for about two hours on 
the Toronto and New York exchanges 
The trading ban also was put on Dome 
Mines Ltd., a Toronto-based gold pro 
ducer and subsidiary of Dome Petro¬ 
leum. 

The Toronto 300 index made a record 
one-day jump of 22.80 points to 1255 01 

The trading flurry followed several 


days of rumors that Dome and Gulf had 
made a major find at their Kopanoar and 
1 kalerk wells in the Beaufort 

But Dome, in a prepared statement 
Friday, would only repeal what it an 
nounced a week ago—that its drills had 
uncovered hydrocarbon sho*s at both 
wells but more drilling would be re 
quired to “assess the si/e or commer 
ciality of these hydrocarbon shows .” 

In the same vein, a statement from 
Gulf said until both wells have reached 
their total depth of 1L000 feet and were 
logged and tested, “there is mi basis for 
unusual market reaction." 

Dome closed Friday on the Toronto 
Slock Exchange up$12 at $95 w hile Gulfs 
shares were up more than $5. Dome 
Mines shares rose $12. 


‘The young 
will get 
clobbered’ 


N Proposals by thg federal government to make it 
* more difficult to claim unemployment insurance were 
greeted by warnings from labor officials on Friday. 

In Vancouver. George Hewison of the United Fish¬ 
ermen and Allied Workers Union said changes in eligi¬ 
bility requirements for 
unemployment insurance 
will be devastating to 
young people entering the 
work force and to seasonal 
employees. 

_ “Young people coming into 
the market, if they can't find 
a job—and let’s face it. there 
aren't many jobs—will get 
clobbered. Women on season¬ 
al work, who don’t get that 
much work opportunity, will 
get clobbered too." 

Jack Munro. president of 
the International Wood 
workers of America, said the 
federal government should 
resign. 

“I don’t believe how 
damned irresponsible this 
government can be,” Munro 

said. 

Dave Mclityrp. of the B.l\ 
Federation of Labor, said the 
changes were dishonest and 
political manoeuvering 
B.C.*s Finance Minister 
Evan Wolfe said while he is 
basically in favor of refine¬ 
ments to the unemployment 
Insurance program, the cuts 
proposed by the federal gov¬ 
ernment will have a major 
impact on welfare pro* 
grams * 

“I am more interested in 
seeing what approach the 
federal government Is devel¬ 
oping towards cost-sharing 
programs,” Wolfe said 
In Toronto, the president of 
the Ontario Federation of 
Labor said proposed changes 
are'nothing more (han a 
political ploy that will appeal 
to society’s most negative 
forces. 

“The proposals show the 
government’s insensitivity to 
working people and to the 
young In this country,” Clif¬ 
ford Pilkey said in an inter 
view Friday . 


15 BYELECTIONS RULE OUT BIG TEST? 


Mini-vote’ set for Oct. 16 



Rondeau 

... visibly shaken 

MP found 
guilty -, • 
of arson, 
conspiracy 

„ GRANBY, Que. (CP) - In¬ 
dependent Gilbert Rondeau 
became the first MP in 32 
years to be convicted of an 
indictable offence Friday, 
when he was found guilty of 
arson and conspiracy in con 
nection with the burning of a 
building which he owned 
The 56-year-old MP refused 
any comment, leaving the 
courthouse shortly after 
Judge Denis Bouchard, who 
heard the case without a jury, 
handed down his verdict and 
set a sentencing hearing for 
Sept. If. 

Rondeau remains free until 
then, and his lawyers. Paul 
Lesage and Michel Robert, 
say it Is too early to decide 
whether they will appeal 
An indictable offence, a 
legal category reserved for 
more serious crimes, refers 
to any offence punishable by 
at least two years in prison 
Rondeau faces a maximum 
penalty of 14 years. 

In a 67-page verdict that 
took 90 minutes to deliver, 
Page 2—MP guilty 



-Colonist photo by ion McKam 


LA BAIT'S WORKER BUI Dunaway inspects first bottled beer off to come off 
conveyor In brewery in nearly three months. But wait at store Is not over. 

Return of a true 
Canadian spirit 


B> DON COLLINS 


Inside 

McGeer stands firm 
on * pot' teachers 

—Page 10 

Jubilee Derby 
starts today 

—King Fisherman. 50 



Background 

i 

Severe quake 

Bridge 

Church 

25 

12,1* 

hits Taiwan 

Classified 

Cooties 

25-27 

23 

Crossword 

21 

TAIPEI, Taiwan (UPI) - 

Editorials 

4 

A severe earthquake hit 

Entertainment 

26-22 

northern Taiwan today and 

Family 

It 

the weather bureau said the 

Finance 

$.» 

- tremors were so strong that 

King Fisherman 

31 

all Its seismographs on the 

Marine Calendar 

22 

Island were knocked out 

Provincial Court 

19 

► The bureau estimated the 

Sports 

14-16 

quake at six or more on the 
•pen-ended Richter scale. 

Your Good Health 

11 





Look no longer for that first concrete 
sign of a true Canadian spirit. 

It’s out there now in the pubs of the 
land, at the liquor stores, wherever thirsty 
men and women gather 
“They were asking for Canadian draft 
beer today and some of them didn’t like It too 
much when we said it wasn’t in yet." one 
Victoria hotel waiter said Friday night 
ft was a full day after the end of the 
three-month brewery shutdown and the pa 
triotic tastebuds were tired of waiting. 

The first draft in a long time should hit 
the pubs today. But the news Isn’t as good for 
those who want to buy bottled Canadian beer 
at the government-operated stores 
Spokesmen for the liquor distribution 
branch sky there Is a week-to-10-day wait to 
clear the American stock, which is still 
coming In. and that It will probably take 
that long to get the Canadian bottled beer Into 
full production again 

That seems to come as a bit of a surprise to 
people like Robert Mussett, area manager 
for Labatt’s He said no less than 20,000 dozen 
bottles of Labatt’s were produced here Fri¬ 
day. but that it Is up to the branch to say 
where It Is to go. 

The first draft to grace the tables in 
Victoria tod ay will come all the way from 
Vancouver. Until things get back to normal, 


• Breweries claim $5# million strike loss. 

Page 40 

(he Labatt’s plant here is concentrating only 
on bottle beer, while Us New Westminster 
plants churning out draft. 

And what does the thirsty public think of it 
all? 

“Look.” said one beer drinker, “I’ve 
been drinking hard stuff all this time and that 
isn’t really the w ay 1 like It. Normally 1 drink 
the kind of light stuff that is low on calories 
and alcohol content because of my weight. 
You can only get it in Canadian stock. And 
now they’re going to keep pushing the 
American stuff at me in the stores. This 
could mean war. ” 

The boys down at the pub weren't talking 
war. 

“Actually they’re going pretty good on 
what they can get tonight.” the waiter said. 
“But they know that tomorrow is another 
day. that the good old Canadian draft will 
he here again." 

It seemed enough to make a Canadian 
swell with pride, until the waiter dropped one 
more line. 

“Sure they like the Canadian taste. But 
that's not the main reason. The main reason 
is that they're Tired of paying $1.25 a bottle for 
the imported stuff when they can normally 
get a glass of beer for 50 cents ” 

The Canadian spirit, It seems, has a 
price tag t 


OTTAWA (CP) - Prime 
Minister Trudeau called Oct. 
16 byelections Friday in 
seven vacant federal ridings, 
a move that could rule out a 
fall general election 
The date coincides with 
byelections in efght other 
empty seats, and Trudeau 
added in a prepared state¬ 
ment that his government 
“intends to proceed deter¬ 
minedly” with Its current 
economy recovery program 
But while the announce 
ment appeared to undercut 
the possibility of a general 
election this fall, opposition 
spokesman criticized Tru¬ 
deau for not making his in¬ 
tentions more clear 
“As usual the prime minis 
ter is vacillating.” said NDP 
Leader Ed Broadbent 
There was still a possiblitv 
Trudeau could return next 
Tuesday from his visit with 
the pope and announce a Nov. 

6 general election 
Nothing of substance would 
be changed by the result of 
the byelections—Trudeau 
could not lose his majority 
even if he lost all 15 seats 
The byelections would be 
cancelled if Trudeau calls a 
general election before Oct. 
16. But the byeltction an 
nouncement appeared to 
make that possibility more 
remote, and a spokesman for 
the prime minister acknow 
lodged there certainly 
'wouldn't be “an election at 
this time.” 

By law, Trudeau can wait 
another 10 morilhs before he 
is forced to call a general 
election. But there has been 
speculation he might cajl a 
fall vote and spare candi 
dates the trouble of running 
first in byelections and then 
In a general election a few 
months later. 

The prime minister made 
the announcement in a news 
release shortly before a trip 
to Rome to attend the instal¬ 
lation of Pope John Paul. 

Currently, the 15 vacancies 
mean* more than a million 
Canadians have no MP. 

Chief Electoral Officer 
Jean-Marc Hamel said he is 
ready, but adds that the stop¬ 
gap votes give rise to a num 
her of complications. 

The byelections would be 
fought on riding boundaries 


last used in the July 8. 1974 
election—boundaries that 
have since been changed 
under redistribution 
Candidates nominated on 
the basis of new electoral dis¬ 
tricts may. In some cases, 
have to be renominated. And 
old parly riding associations. 


disbanded after rrdistribu 
tion. would have to be re 
formed to run the cam 
paigns 

The vacant ridings reach 
from Humber-Sl George s 
St. Barbe in Newfoundland to 
Burnaby-Richmond-Delta in 
British Columbia 


No for Pierre 
may mean 
go for Socreds 


B> JIM HLMK 


Trash can 
yields 
bank bonds 

VANCOUVER (CP) - 

An elderly man wearing 
tattered clothes wat look¬ 
ing through garbage cans 
In the city’* downtown 
district Friday when he 
discovered $500,000 In 
Royal Bank of Canada 
treasury bonds that could 
be cashed by the bearer. 

The unidentified man. a 
resident of a Salvation 
Army hostel, immedi¬ 
ately turned in the five 
certificates worth $100. 
000 each to a Royal Bank 
branch. 


Is Premier Bennett waiting for Prime Minister Trudeau 
to make his move before deciding whether or not to call a 
fall provincial election? 

While Bennett remains closed-mouthed on his election 
plans, he did change his hard-line “no election this year ' 
stand during the taping of Capital Comment for Sunday 
viewing on CTV. 

Asked if there could be a fall election in B.C.. he wa* 
non-committal, repeating that there wefc several op 
lions — fall, spring, next fall. When asked if hr would like 
to repeat earlier statements that he did not anticipate a 
provincial election this year, the premier slid off into a 
non-answer answer. 

«. 

TRUDEAU HAS INDICATED that his final decision will 
be made over the Labor Day weekend. Bennett refuses to 
give any indication of when his decision will be made 

Close observers of the political scene appear evenly 
divided on thj fall versus spring provincial election. 

Spring supporters point to the premier’s positive asser 
lions, repeated many times earlier this year, that he had 
no intention of railing an election in 1978. 

The fall supporters cite several “indicators:” .* 

• The high profile of the premier in recent weeks. 

• A steady procession of government grants benefit- 
ting most municipalities throughout the province. 

• High-profile cabinet ministers who instead of hand 
ing out press releases have suddenly started to hold press 
conferences 

• Increased financial aid to senior citizens. 

• The premier’s new stance on election timing, chang 
ing from “no” to “maybe.” 

ONE PROMISE BENNETT says he intends to keep is 
that there will be no winter election of his calling. 

The lait provincial election was Dec IL 1175 

•If Trudeau decides to go to the polls in November, now 
his earliest possible date, there is little doubt that Ben 
nett will wait for spring 

If Trudeau decides to wait till spring, B.C. could go to 

the polls in late October. 

Munro enters 
airline dispute 




. 


MONTREAL (CP) - 
Labor Minister John Munro's 
intervention in the dispute 
between Air Canada and the 
union representing its 7,500 
ground-service workers 
raised new hope for a settle¬ 
ment Fridary in a conflict 
which had seemed dead¬ 
locked beyond solution for 
more than a week. 

Air Canada president 
Claude Taylor Issued a state¬ 
ment an hour after Munro ’» 
announcement. saylifg he 
welcomed “the willingness of 
the federal minister of labor 
to become involved In an ef- 


-z w; 


fort to resolve the current 
contract dispute.” 

The International Associa 
tion of Machinists, for its 
part, said it woult^try to find 
three more representatives 
from it* Montreal local to fill 
the vacancies left on the na 
tional negotiating committee 
by the resignation of prev tails 
Montreal-area bargainers 

The news from Ottawa, 
calling both sides to a meet 
ing in the capital Sunday 
morning, came just as IAM 
negotiators were on the verge 
of leaving Montreal in de 
spair to return home for the 
long Labor Day weekend 




























V 


* _ 


2 DAILY COLONIST, Victoria* B C . Saturday. September 2. 167$ 


Cash-switch bitter pill for out-of-work 


ment insurance funds used 
for job creation.’’ 

At a news conference 
where he announced the 
changes. Cullen was unable 
to give reporters an estimate 
on how many persons would 
be affected by the tighter 
rules, but an official from his 
department later said that by 
1980-SI the changes would 
have the effect of disqualify 
ing about 263,000 of the ap 
proximately 2.5 million bene 
fit claims Chat would 
normally be filed- 

Cullen said: “I’m con¬ 
cerned about job hoppers. 


I rom I 


I'm not against it but it 
shouldn’t be done at the ex 
pense of Canadian taxpay¬ 
ers.*.* 

He said the number of per 
sons forced on to provincial 
welfare rolls as a result of 
tighter qualifying rules im¬ 
posed last December ‘was 
less than five per cent ” 

He said he did not exper t 
his new proposals to result in 
a massive increase of provin 
cial welfare recipients be 
cause proposed make-work 
plans would increase job op 
portunltles. 


Persons now must work be 
tween 10 and 14 weeks out of 
the previous year to qualify 
for benefits The average 
weekly benefit paid in April 
was $110.33 The maximum 
weekly benefit now is $160 
and the maximum insurable 
earnings now are $240 a 
week. 

Cullen proposes to reduce 
the weekly benefit rate to 6« 
per cent of weekly insurable 
earnings from 66 2-3 per 
cent. 

The job-creation plans, 
whiah will mix direct make v 
work programs with tax in-' 
centives to industry, are ex¬ 


pected ttf create what Cullen 
described as 113.000 work 
years of employment and in 
volve 36*000 persons in jobs 
and training. 

Cijllen acknowledged at a 
news conference that young 
persons in particular would 
be affected by the unemploy 
ment insurance changes. 

Last month. 14.2 per cent of 
persons between the ages of 
15 and 24 were out of work 

The National Union of Stu¬ 
dents, representing 350.000 
post secondary students, 
blasted Cullen for his sugges 
tion that many work for short 
» 


j r* 


Mini-kingdom 
eludes Britain, 
battles raiders 

HARWICH, England (AP) — He calls himself 
Prince Roy and claims sovereignty over the world’s * 
smallest state. He issues passports, prints stamps, 
mints coin* and now and again fights invading pi¬ 
rates. 

He’s Roy Bates, former owner of a chain of 
butcher shops, and his personal red, blue and white 
flag flies above his domain which is about 12 kilo¬ 
metres off the east coast—beyond the five-kilometre 
, territorial limit Britain exercises in criminal mat¬ 
ters. 

It’s a concrete and steel anti-aircraft fortress, 
built during the Second World War as part of the 
defences of the Hirer Thames and Britain's east coast. 
It rises 12 metres from the sea bed and stands above 
the waves on two massive concrete pillars. 

THE NINE by 23 met re platform was derelict and 
abandoned until Bates, a former major in the Royal 
Fusiliers with a distinguished war record, occupied it: 
just before Christmas of 1966 with his wife. Joan, and a 
small crew. 

Nine months later he declared the fortress, then 
known as Hough's Tower, to be an independent state 
called Sea land 

He has since installed generators and added a 
helicopter landing pad, accommodation! and such 
devices as booby traps, trip wires and an electric 
fence. The only way aboard is by helicopter or by a 
ladder lowered from the platform. 

Bates has resisted all attempts to remove him. Ha 
and his crew have fought off numerous attempts to 
board the fortress from private vessels which he 
claims were acting with at least tacit approval from 
the British government. 

DURING ONE boarding attempt. Bates’ son Mi 
chael, 26. fired a gun over the heads of the {Aiders, and 
reports say gasoline bombs were thrown afthe seven 
men, said to be acting for a man who claimed 
squatter's rights to the fortress. 

The police subsequently charged Michael Bates 
with several firearms offences. But at the trial on Oct. 
25, 1968, the judge said he could not pass judgment 
because Sealand lies outside British jurisdiction. 

Last month the Financial Times said construction 
was planned for next spring on the first phase of the 
commercial development of Sealand. It said about 
$70.4 million had been earmarked for a radio station, a 
casino and a hotel. 

Sealand has four somewhat permanent resi¬ 
dents—Bates, his son Michael, and two other men. But 
there are also 180 passport-holding citizens and a 
constitution which was signed Sept. 25, 1975, and says 
the national language is English and the legal system 
is based on British common law and the British law of 
contract. 


Toll put at 50 
as Nicaragua 
rebels flee 


periods so they can take ad¬ 
vantage of the relatively 
short qualifying period for 
unemployment insurance 

benefits. 

“If students and youth have 
marginal attachments to the 
labor force, it is hardly by 
choice,’’ said student union 
executive Bev Crossman, 
who added that federal 
make-work programs for 
young persons offer short¬ 
term jobs. 

“By changing unemploy¬ 
ment insurance, he (Cullen) 
has effectively ensured that 
victims of short term em¬ 
ployment measures will not 
be eligible for unemployment 
insurance.’’ 

The 2 .3-million member 
Canadian Labor Congress ac¬ 


cused the federal govern¬ 
ment of “attacking the unem- 
ployed rather than 
unemployment” and called 
for an immediate federal 
election. 

But Roy Phillip*, executive 
director of the Canadian 
Manufacturers Association, 
said Cullen’s proposals repre¬ 
sented positive steps. 

Ontario New Democrat 
John Rodriguez described the 
government’s moves “a$ 
pure political opportunism.” 


fifes" 


*15 —*15 — ‘15 

45-GAL OAiTwhIsKEY 
— BARRELS — 

PH. 38*. 1*26 


THIS WEEKEND . . . 


MATAGALPA. Nicaragua 
(AP) — National Guard 
troops tore aside makeshift 
barricades Friday and 
moved into Matagalpa. held 
for five days by youthful 
rebels whose bloody resis¬ 
tance had become a symbol 
of the popular uprising 
against President'Anastasio 
Somoza. 

Dr. Cesar Amador Kuhl. a 
surgeon Working with the 
Red Cross in this city 160 
kilometres north Managua, 
the capital, said 56 persons 
had died in the fighting here 
since it began late last week, 
including an undetermined 
number killed in the final 
push by the guard 

He said more than 206 
others were wounded. 

Red Cross workers said the 
rebels had withdrawn during 
the night and that the guard, 
mainstay of Somoza's. mili¬ 
tary government, is in total 
control. 

Witnesses said many of the 
rebels—large numbers of 
them teen-agers armed with 
a variety of pistols, rifles and 
some shotguns—fled Into the 
hills surrounding the pity of 
40,000 people. Intermittent 
firing was heard in the hills at 
mid-mdrning. 

A young man fleeing from 
the city who refused to be 
identified said the guard had 
staged “a violent assaidt with 
rockets and armored cars.” 
He said “people without num¬ 
ber” had been shot. 

Another refugee. Red Cross 
nurse Esperanza Mesa de 
Lanza, said she had been 
working in a temporary 
morgue in the city where she 
had seen the dead “stacked 
one on top of the other like 
wood; there must have been 
56 dead.” 

Anti-government violence 
was reported elsewhere in 
Nicaragua late Thursday, but 
there were no immediate re¬ 


ports of new fighting In the 
provinces Friday. 

Many shops and other busi¬ 
nesses remained closed, ob¬ 
serving a general strike 
called to press demands for 
Somoza’s resignation 




UPER 

ANSUI 

TEREO 

ALE 


HOUSE OF STEIN ON YATES 



MP GUILTY IN ARSON PLOT 


Judge Bouchard summed up 
much of the evidence pre¬ 
sented during the four-day 
trial that ended about a 
month ago 

He largely accepted the 
testimony of 23-year-old Jac¬ 
ques Harbec, co-accused in 
the case, who testified that 
Rondeau paid him $1,500 to 
set the Tire in a house he 
owned in nearby Bromont on 
Dec 20, 1976 

Rondeau was in Rouyn, 
Que.. on the day of the fire, 
attending the funeral of for 
mer Social Credit leader Real 
Caouette. 

Harbec testified that Ron 


I rom 


deau, a long-time family* 
friend, asked him to do the 
job because things were 
going badly. He said he didn’t 
have the courage, however, 
and testified that he hired 
Jean Bernier, 23, to do the job 
for $200 

. Harbec. charged with con¬ 
spiracy and arson, and Ber 
nier, charged with a single 
count of arson, are still 
awaiting trial. 

The judge added that there 
were contradictions in the 
testimony of both Rondeau 
and his son Michel, and that 
financial statements present 


ed during the trial failed to 
prove the MP’s contention 
that he was well-off and did 
not need money to pay the 
mortgage on the house, which ” 
fell due in mid-1977. 

Rondeau, who has repre 
sented the Eastern Town 
ships riding of Shefford for 13 
of the last 16 years, was vis¬ 
ibly shaken by the verdict. 

He is the first sitting MP to 
be found guilty of a indictable 
offence since 1946, when 
Communist Fred Rose was 
convicted of conspiring to 
give unauthorized Informa¬ 
tion to the Soviet Union in the 
(touzenko spy case. 




The weather 


Sept. 2,1978 

Cloudy with periods of rain. 
Winds light. Friday's precipi 
tation: 8.8 mm. Sunshine 1 
hours 12 minutes. Recorded 
high and low at Victoria air¬ 
port 17 and 12. Today’s fore 
cast high and low 17 and 12. 
Today’s sunrise 6:32. sunset 
7:54. Moonrise 6:35 am. 
moonset 7:51 p.m. Sunday 
outlook: occasional showers 

East coast of Vancouver Is¬ 
land — Cloudy with periods of 
rain. Winds fresh to strong 
southeasterly. Friday's pre¬ 
cipitation: 10.2 mm. Record¬ 
ed high and low at Nanaimo 
16 and 11. Forecast high and 
low 17 and 11. Sopday out¬ 
look: occasional showers 

West coast of Vancouver 
Island — Cloudy with periods 
of rain. Winds fresh south 
easterly. Forecast high and 
low at Toflno 16 and 11. Sun¬ 
day outlook: showers. 

North coast of the Main 
land — Rain changing to 
showers in the afternoon. 


Winds fresh to strong south 
easterly. Forecast high and 
low 14 and 9. Sunday outlook, 
showers. 

Extended outlook. Monday- 
through Wednesday — 
showers, temperatures near 
or a little below normal. 
Highs 16 to 21. Lows 9 to 12. 

READINGS 

Ml! M* Prec 


Prince George 
William* Lake 
Kamloops 
Dawson City 
Whitehorse 
Fort Nelson 
Fort St John 
Peace River 
Yellowknife 
inuvik 
Seattle 
Spokane 
Portland 
San Francisco 
Los Angeles 


SI John s 

Halifax 

Fredericton 

Montreal 

Ottawa 

Toronto 

North Bav . 

Kanora 

UUllUSifSM 

Winnipeg 

Churchill 

Tha Pas 

Brandon 

Regma 

Saskatoon 

Prince Albert 

North Battteford 

Swift Current 

Medicine Hat 

Lethbridge 

Calgary 

Edmonton 

Crenbrook 

Castlegar 

Penticton 

Revelstoke 

Vancouver 

Prince Rupert 

Terrace 

Stewart 

Port Hardv 

Tofino 

Comox 


11 

19 
24 
23 

23 

24 
21 
27 
29 

• 

12 
21 
21 
21 

14 

20 
21 
26 
24 
22 
22 
17 
17 
20 

15 
II 
17 
14 

16 
14 

14 

15 


10 - 

IS 1.0 

10 - 

10 - 

9 . — 
• - 


Las Vegas 
New York 
Chicago 


17 

15 

il 

23 

13 

14 

19 

20 
13 
19 
19 

25 

27 

2 

41 

41 

24 
29 


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DAII.Y C01.0MST, Virturia. B.C* Saturday. September >. I«<x .1 



It’s treachery—Smith 


O * 


SALISBURY. Rhodesia 
(UPI) — Rhodesian Prime 
Minister lan Smith Friday 
accused the United States 
and Britain of “deceit and 
treachery’* and of joining 
Cuba and the Soviet Union to 
wreck his internal settlement 
with three moderate black 
leaders 

Smith, in one of his bit 
terest attacks ever on Wash 
ington and London, said the 
two Western powers had ren 
eged on promises to lift trade 
sanctions and recognize the 
biracial interim govern 
ment. 

He also charged them with 
supporting the guerrillas 
waging a five year war to 
topple his regime. 

“Our principle problem has 
been that the British and 
American governments have 
gone out of their way to un 
dermine our plan and at the 
same time have given assis¬ 


tance and encouragement to 
our opponents—the terror 
istx.” Smith said. 

• They have lined up witn 
the Russians and the Cubans 
—a sordid chapter in Anglo 
American history, Especially 
when one knows the record of 
how they led us up the garden 
path into accepting their idea 
of one-man. one-vote. An in 
credible performance from 
our so-called friends 


guerrilla organization 
scorned the accord as a sv' 
lout. 

Itr his speech at the formal 
opening of an agricultural 
and industrial exhibition at 
'the Salisbury fairgrounds. 
Smith said Marxists, the 
World Council of Churches 


and “pink tinted do gopders ’ 
were joining in the campaign 
against the transitional gov 
ernment 

“There are powerful forces 
trying to destroy us and there* 
is i)o limit to the evil means to 
which they will resort." he 
said. 


As part of his March 3 “in 
ternal” agreement with the 
black leaders. Smith accept 
ed universal adult suffrage in 
the predominantly black na 
tion. But the Patriotic Front 



- CORRECTIONS 
Lesson in Savings Sale 

August 31 to Sept. 2,1978 

On pago 8 — No. 1. 3-Rrng Binders should be 
$1 47, not 2.47; 1V ring binder should be 2 97. not 
1.47. We apologize to our customers for any in¬ 
convenience caused by these errors in our Lesson 
in Savings Sale ’ flyer. 


oaie nyer. — ^ 


Hillside Avenue 




Iranians rampage in Los Angeles 


A man is subdued by Los Angeles policeman during 
rock throwing protest by Iranians angered by Ameri¬ 
can press coverage of the recent movie theatre 


fire in Iran in which hundreds of people died. Demon- 
stratum were also opposed to the regime of the Shah. 
Police arrested 150 of the demonstrators. 


Small pox 
professor’s 
throat cut 

BIRMINGHAM. Kngland 
j Reuter) — The professor in 
charge of the laboratory 
linked with an outbreak of 
smallpox has been found with 
his throat cut, a hospital 
spokesman said Friday. 

Prof. Henry Bedson was ' 
taken to hospital suffering 
from a severe throat wound, 
the spokesman said, but gave 
no details of how it was 
caused. 

Janet Parker, a 40-year-old 
medical photographer, con¬ 
tracted the disease while 
working at the medical 
school, one of three places in 
Britain where the smallpox 
virus is kept for research. 

She is still in hospital but is 
said by health authorities to 
be recovering. 


Pope’s second choice 
was to be journalist 


VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope John Paul, 
a frequent newspaper contributor who once 
panted to be a journalist, implored report 
ers in a special audience Friday to “focus on 
the heart and substance of our ministry and 
not the incidental details.” 

His eyes twinkling behind steel-rimmed 
glasses, the new pope said he read with 
some amusement the speculation on papal 
candidates in news reports preceding his 
surprise election by the College of Cardinals 
last Saturday 

He likened the journalistic speculators to 
the Italian editor who covered (heVranco- 
Prussian war t4 not oy concentrating on the. 
important discussions between Napoleon III 
and the King of Prussia but by dwelling on 
the brand of cigarettes they smoked and 
whether they wore red or grey socks. ” 

More than 1.000 reporters, photographers 
and television crews from around the world 
thronged the golden \ aulted Hall of (lie Ben 


edictions in the Apostolic Palace of the 
Vatican 

They heard the pontiff suddenly depart 
from his prepared text tp lecture them 
gently on the basics of journalism from the 
point of view of a man who once said if he 
had not become a priest, he would have 
become a journalist. 

Acknowledging the power of television. 
Pope John Paul indicated ibaUas far as 
mass communications are concerned he wiR 
be a modern pope in reaching his worldwide 
flock of 700 million Roman Catholics 

Albino Cardinal Luciani, meeting repnri 
ers for the ftrM time as pope has himself 
become in less than a week Italy's best-sell- . 
ing author 

His lllustrissimi— imaginary letters writ¬ 
ten to Charles Dickens, Pinocchio. Mark 
Twain and other historical and fictional 
characters while he was a cardinal—is the 
hottest book in town. _ 


Dog training bombs out 


ST. LOUS. Mo (AP) - 
Authorities patrolled high 
ways and telephoned hun 
dreds of air travellers Friday 
looking for an elderly couple 
who drove away from the air 
port, unaware that police had 
siuck two one pound sticks of 
defused dynamite under their 
bumper. 

Police emphasized the cou¬ 
ple was believed tu be in vir 
tually no danger from their 
surprise package because no 
detonating device was at 
tached. 


The late model maroon' 
Chevrolet with Missouri li¬ 
cence plates had been chosen 
Thursday as a hiding place 
by a polite canine team 
training dogs to sniff explo¬ 
sives at Lambert St. Louis 
International Airport 
John Clouse and Kd Phi 
lippe. two airport police ca 
nine officers, said they noli 
fied toll gate personnel that 
they would use a valet park 
ing lot to train their dogs 
Valet lots, where passengers 
leave their cars with atten- 


$4,500 in gold dust 
exchanged for car 

EDMONTON (CP) — A city ear salesman says a man 
offered him about $4,?00 worth of girld dust this week as 
payment for a new car 

"l*ve never seen that much gold dust before.” said AH 
Thompson. “I’ve been in this business for 20 years and had 
watches and rings as down payments, but I’ve never seen 
anything like this. .’ 

The man. who asked to remain unidentified, traded in 
his car on a new $10,000 model and paid the difference in gold 
dust. 

The anonymous prospector s poke, delivered in a coffee 
jar, weighed in at 21.67 ounces 


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lic. 

But while the officers led 
ihe dogs away from the dyna 
mite laden car to begin the 
search, an attendant drove 
the auto out of the lot and 
returned It to the owners. 

By Friday morning airport 
officials had telephoned 200 
Missourians who flew into the 
airport Thursday , hut had no 
luck. The airport enlisted city 
and county police, the Mis¬ 
souri Highway Patrol and (he 
U S. aviation administration 
to help in the search, Lieut. 
JohnfReeg said. Airport po 
lice are under the jurisdiction 
of the St Louis police 

Keeg. an airport watch 
commander who has'been in 
charge of the dog teams for 
about a month, described the 
mishap as a breakdown in 
communications between 


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(hefwcars. 

Airport police said dyna 
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Comment 


SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 2, 1*7* 


Industry? Sure, 
but over there 

IT’S GOOD TO SEE the aldermen of Saanich, 
the planners and others going at it hammer and 
tongs on the question of where an industrial park 
should go. 

It s obviously an Important subject for the 
municipality and it's not necessarily bad when 
debate on an issue generates some heat. Angry 
people usually drop all the phoney words and 
speak from the heart 

If aldermen can bottle their personal biases 
against each other and argue the site selection 
on its merits, the people of the municipality will 
be well served. Being human, those around the 
couricil table may not find that easy — but it is 
what they were elected to do. 

Most everyone will agree that public hear¬ 
ings on the proposed Interurban site, or any 
other, are an essential part of making decisions 
on such major issues. They provide a forum for 
those with specific interests, like the people who 
live nearby. 

But what of the rest of the municipality, 
what of the vast majority of Saanich residents 
who will never show up at any hearing because 
they are not directly affected by what is built out 
on Interurban? / ■■ 

If there was some way of tapping their 
opinion, most of them probably would say that 
the Interurban location for Industry seems a 
better choice than Royal Oak — for some my 
basic reasons. The land out Interurban way is 
plainly less attractive and industrial plants there 
would simply be further from most of the houses 
in Saanich. 

Isn't that how most people feel about Indus 
try moving in? They’re all for it because it 
means jobs and help in sharing the tax load But 
they don't want it near them. 


Lovers’ parting 

THE SILVER SCREEN offers us endless por¬ 
trayals of love — but when it comes to the real 
thing, to words like fidelity and devotion, the 
actors of Hollywood have assembled a dreadful 
record in real life. 

Let us pause then to take note of a most 
notable exception — Charles Boyer — who took 
his own life last week under circumstances 
which surpass Love Story — because they are 
true. 

Boyer (“come with me to the Casbah") was 
one of the screen’s great lovers of an earlier era 
but his star had long set. He was 79 when he 
died. 

He and his wife Patricia were married for 44 
years. It was the first and only marriage for 
each of them. He nursed her through terminal 
cancer for the past six months. Two days after 
she died he took an overwhelming overdose of 
barbituates. / 

That may not be the wgy true love should 
end. But it is impressive — and it beats most of 
the stuff up there on the Silver Screen. 

Talking turkey 

WHEN IT COMES to practising a political ide¬ 
ology, it's best to be a little flexible. 

In the Soviet Ukraine, for example, author¬ 
ities have enlisted that nasty Capitalist trait 
— greed — for the greater good of their Commu¬ 
nist citizenry. 

There have been lectures for the workers in 
this mining region on the evils of smoking. 
Management has given up tobacco to set a good 
example. But the clincher? A trade union has 
offered a $6,500 prize for any shop or section 
whose workers will all quit smoking 

Money talks. Any language. 


• • • — 

A new listing of the world’s wonders 


J 



The rock-hewn churches of Lalibela 
in Ethiopia ... the medieval salt mines 
of Wteiiczka in Poland .. the Galapa 
gos Islands off the Pacific coast of 
Ecuador. These are just some of the 
cultural properties and natural sites 
which may one day be regarded as the 
20th Century's equivalent of “The Sevfn 
Wonders of the World.’* 

For these three sites are among 15 
properties which have been short-luted 
for the attention of the recently created 
World Heritage Committee when it 
meets in Washington this month. 

If chosen, they will be tha first cul¬ 
tural or natural treasures to be included 
in a new world heritage list which is 
being drawn up at the initiative of the 
United Nations Scientific and Cultural 
Organization (UNESCO). 

Other candidates for inclusion in 
the list are I'Anse aux Meadows Nation¬ 
al Historic Park In Canada, with its re 
mains of the first None settlement in 
North America: the city of Quito in 
Ecuador, with its fine Spanish colonial 
architecture; the island of Goree off 
Senegal from where black slaves were 
sent to the Americas; Aachen Cathedral 
in West Germany and the historical 
urban and architectural area of the city 
of Cracow in Poland. 

Also being considered are Nahannl 
National Park in Canada, Simien Na¬ 
tional Park in Ethiopia. Ichkeul Na¬ 
tional Park in Tunisia, and Mesa Verde 
and Yellowstone Parks in the United 
States 

Under a UNESCO convention con¬ 
cerning the protection of the world cut 
tural and natural heritage adopted in 
1972, signatories recognize the responsi 
bility of individual states to look after 
their cultural and natural heritage 
But they also accept that some prop- 


By MICHAEL PABBOTT 


erties in the world are of such outstand 
ing universal value that their protection 
should become the responsibility of the 
international community as a whole. 

With a view to establishing what 
these unique properties are, an interna 
tional committee composed of profes¬ 
sional representaltives from 15 coun¬ 
tries was set up. Thii month this World 
Heritage Committee will be sifting ap¬ 
plications from signatory states. 

Once a cultural or natural property 
has been included, the state concerned 
"Will be entitled to technical aid from 
the newly-created world heritage fund 
which currently disposes of around $1 
million of contributions. In this way the 
international community will be able to 
do something to preserve what K consid 
era to be the world's most valuable 
cultural and natural properties. 

Even the briefest glance at the 
recommendations being submitted will 
show that they are far from com¬ 
prehensive. It la difficult to believe that 
the world's wonder* are limited to only 
eight countries. 

But as UNESCO’s Anne Raid! has 
said. “This is only the beginning. These 
countries were the only ones to meet our 
June deadline. Other countries will have 
the chance of making their submissions 
at future meetings of tha committee 
because the sifting process will be a con 
tinual one.’* 

The procedure has a UN touch about 
it. Only those properties in the terri¬ 
tories of UNESCO member-states which 
are parties to the convention can be 
nominated and only those states can 



4a**£*»<? 


|Pete^Wofthington| 

We have a dismal record 
battling for dissidents 


TORONTO -If a p6II were 
taken as to which group is the 
most persecuted in the Soviet 
Union, the overwhelming re¬ 
sponse likely would be that 
Jews are the Kremlin's Num¬ 
ber One victims. 

Untrue. The most persecut¬ 
ed group in the U.S.S.R 
today are Evangelical Bap¬ 
tists. Jews cause the Soviets 
the most trouble though, pri¬ 
marily because they stick to¬ 
gether and fight for on* an¬ 
other in other countries, thus 
advertising a harsh Image of 
the U.S.S.R. 

The symbol or martyr of 
Baptist persecution is Georgi 
Vins. 49, the Ukrainian leader 
of 100,000 or so “Initiators" 
who’ve broken from the main 
body of Soviet Baptists Vins 
is i Soviet version of Martin 
Luther Kina in his courage 
and dedication to Christian 
ethics and human rights.. 

He also is serving his sec¬ 
ond five-year term in a labor 
camp, and fears among his 
friends, relatives, admirers, 
are that he can't survive the 
rigors of his sentence much 
longer. 

Vins is an eighth genera¬ 
tion Baptist pastor. His 
father, Pyotr, studied reli¬ 
gion In the U.S. and was Im¬ 
prisoned three times before 
dying In a Stalinist labor 
camp in Siberia. His grandfa¬ 
ther was Canadian, and 
founded a bibie school In 
Winkler. Man., that still func¬ 
tions. 

Georgia wife has been Im 
prisoned for her faith. And 
now his 6on, Peter, 23, has 
been imprisoned for monitor¬ 
ing the Soviet's record on 
the Helsinki agreements. 


U is a family destined for 
martyrdom. 

Although the Vins case has 
surfaced sporadically for 
years, little has been done on 
their behalf. Among the more 
ardent campaigners are a 
pair of Jews who recently 
emigrated from Russia — 
mathmetlclans David and 
Gregori Chudnovsky. * 

They have repeatedly ap¬ 
pealed to Baptiste in America 
to protest on behalf of their 
Ukrainian co-believers. But 
to little avail. “You know 
what they said?*' asked 
David rhetorically and with 
wonder In his voice. “They 
said they'd pray every day 
for Georgi Vins and his fam¬ 
ily? There are 41 million Bap¬ 
tists In America; can you 
imagine the Influence they 
could have .. .** 

Efforts to get the Vins fam¬ 
ily out of the U.S.S.R. have 
been thwarted because there 
are no relatives In the U.S. to 
campaign for viaas. 

But Vins has relatives in 
Canada — an aunt and cous¬ 
in, Lulse Buxbaum and her 
son Helmuth of Komoka, 
near London, Ont. For four 
years they have been trying 
to persuade the Canadian 
government to get Involved. 
To no avail, ‘"nw Canadian 
govarnmant has dono less 
than nothing." says Helmuth 
Buxbaum. “When we wanted 
to hold a protest march we 
were threatened with the loss 
of being recognized is a char¬ 
ity. Tha only answer is that 
Trudeau Is anxloos to keep 
good relations with the Soviet 
Union and is afraid they 


apply for assistance from the world 
heritage fund. At the moment only 36 
states have actually signed the conven¬ 
tion including Canada. France, West 
Germany. Iran. India and the V.S. Italy 
is on the point of ratifying; and Britain. 
Ireland, Belgium and Japan have not 
yet committed themselves. Few of the 
signatories have been able to prepare 
their submissions in the six months al¬ 
lowed them. 

But what is likely to create contro¬ 
versy is the manner in which the proper 
ties are chose*. According to the con 
ventioo, no fomial limit will be imposed 
on the total number of properties to be 
included in the list or on the number of 
properties any Individual slate can 
submit. 

The committee has laid down very 
detailed criteria on how a selection is to 
be based, 

A cultural property, for example, 
must meet one or raofe of the following 
conditions: it should (1) represent a 
unique artistic or aesthetic achieve¬ 
ment; (2) have exerted considerable 
influence on subsequent developments. 
(3) be unique, extremely rare or of 
great antiquity; (4) be among the most 
characteristic examples of s type of 
structure; (3) be a characteristic exam 
pie of a significant traditional style of 
architecture which is endangered; (I) 
be most importantly associated with 
ideas or beliefs, with events or with 
persons, of outstanding historical im¬ 
portance or significance. 

The state of preservation and its 
authenticity will also be taken into 
account. 


Natural sites should be: (!) out¬ 
standing examples representing the 
major stages of the earth’s evolutionary 
history; (2) be outstanding examples 
representing significant ongoing geolo- 
gicai processes; biological evolution and 
man's interaction with his natural en 
vironmeril; (3) contain unique, rare or 
superlative natural phenomena, forma¬ 
tions or features or areas of exceptional 
natural beauty; (4) be habitats where 
populations of rare or endangered spe 
cies of plants and animals still surv ive 

The committee meeting in Wash 
ington will be composed of represents 
tives from Australia, Canada. Ecuador. 
Egypt, France, West Germany, Ghana. 
Iran. Iraq, Nigeria, Poland, Senegal. 
Tunisia, the United States and Yugosla 
via. Once 40 countries have signed 
the Convention the committee will be 
increased to 21 members. 

The UNESCO initiative is to be 
welcomed for the very interest and con¬ 
troversy it is likely to arouse. For how 
many people are even aware of the 
existence of the 13 properties due to be 
considered by the committee this 
month? 

For that matter, how many ran 
name The Seven Wonders of the Ancient 
World? 

1. The Colossus at Rhodes 

2. The Great Pyramid of Egypt. 

3. The Mausoleum erected by Ar¬ 
temisia for Mausolus, King of Caria 

4. The Statue of Zeus at Olympia 
(Greece). 

5 Temple of Diana at Ephesus, s 
Greek city in Asia Minor. 

A Hanging Gardens of Babylon 

7 The Pharos or lighthouse of Alex¬ 
andria. 

(C) Gemini New* Service Ltd. 


Robert Cameron 


J 


Mobile missiles, empty silos: 
a briefing on strike strategy 


won’t buy our wheat unless 
we are nice to them. Stu¬ 
pid.'* 

Canada has agreed to ac¬ 
cept Peter Vins — if he can 
get an exit visa. But the gov¬ 
ernment won’t put pressure 
on the Soviets for his free¬ 
dom. 

That a thousand Baptists 
•re in prison only because of 
their religion, underlines how 
the Christian church aban¬ 
dons Us own. The World 
Council of Churches is more 
interested In posturing over 
South Africa and Rhodesia 
than it Is in challenging the 
world’s greatest religious 
persecutor. 

Those who fear for Georgi 
Vins and tha Evangelical 
Baptists would be better ad¬ 
vised to appeal directly to 
Jewish organizations than to 
Western Christians. The 
Christian church has lost Its 
courage, confused its priori¬ 
ties. altered its direction. 

Solzhenitsyn sees true reli¬ 
gious faith as being more 
prevalent In the U.S.S.R. 
than in the West. The evi¬ 
dence seems to support this 
thesis. 

Canada’s record for fight¬ 
ing for Its own citizens In 
trouble abroad, ia possibly 
the worsts the developed 
world. And we’va shown little 
concern for fighting for the 
rights of those oppressed by 
the Soviet system. We prefer 
“quiet diplomacy," which 
often means “silence." And 
the Vhts family, whose roots 
and relatives art ia Canada, 
is a case In point. 

(C) Toronto tun SvndicoN 


WASHINGTON, DC.-Just 
when the haroosh over pro 
duction and deployment of 
small neutron weapons for 
NATO has drifted to back 
page coverage. General 
J5nes — new chairman of 
the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff 
— made headlines with an¬ 
other proposal that is 
guaranteed to re-aclivate all 
the ferocious anti-nuclear 
warriors. 

The bogey this time 
around is a Multiple Aiming 
Point system (MAP) to pro¬ 
tect land-based (silo) strata 
gic missiles. 

Passage of time and Im¬ 
proved technology is reck¬ 
oned to make the present 
U.S. armoury of these mis¬ 
siles vulnerable to a decisive 
first strike by about 198345 
(one that would leave the 
U.S. with only a petulant re¬ 
taliatory capability). Since 
SALT limitations will rule 
out the acquisition of extra 
missiles to forestall this pos¬ 
sibility. Jones’ proposal is to 
re-establish security and sis 
bility with mobility and a 
MAP program. 

One model of a MAP sys¬ 
tem would be to replace the 
559 Minuteman III missiles 
with mobile counterparts, 
each having random choice 
of 10 launching silos (for a 
total fo 5,500), with contents 
concealed from satellite in¬ 
telligence. Combined with 
bomber and submarine 
I CBM capability, this should 
reduce the chances of t suc¬ 
cessful first strike attack on 
the U.S. to near zero. 

Nevertheless the cry of 
anti-MAP lobblsts is roughly 
this; “Here we go again! This 
time with a project that In 
vites cheating on SALT and a 
massive proliferation of nu¬ 
clear weapons. So MAP can 
only increase the likelihood 
that our civilization will one 
day be reduced to radio-ac¬ 
tive rubble ’’ 

' Even if one doesn’t agree 
that our planet will ever suf¬ 
fer such a catastrophe, it’s 
worthwhile understandiag 
the rationale opposed to the 
doomsday arguments of 
those who do. Otherwise, in 
an effort to avoid nuclear 
holocaust — which is argu 
ably becomlffg less and less 
likely — the anti-neutron. 
anti-MAP lobbies may well, 
clear the way for another 
round of good old convention¬ 
al mayhem, in the fashion of 
the Second World War. 

Not surprisingly. one # of 
the pseudo arms experts to 
check in quickly with a re¬ 
taliatory blast against the 
MAP scheme, was a Harvard 
professor — Dr. Nacht, 
director of programs for Sci¬ 
ence and International Af- 
fairs. 

The substance of his con¬ 
demnation was (a)’ the 
U.S.S.R. might cheat on 
SALT and fill the extra MAP 
slloa to recreate a pre-emp¬ 
tive threat against the U.S. 
silo force, or (b) she would 
react with a MAP system to 
protect her own 1,000 mis¬ 
siles. 

Three factors make such 
U.S.S.R. chesting oh SALT 
highly Improbable Tha So¬ 
viets certainly realize that 
neither side could win a shell 



game such as this. The cost of 
even trying to do so w ould be 
prohibitive. (Nacht suggests 
80.000 warheads — 10,000 mis¬ 
siles in silos, and each missile 
with eight warheads). The 
most significant point against 
cheating is the prospect of 
high quality 1CBM defences 
with directed energy beam 
(DEB) weapons, operating 
effectively at the speed of 
light. 

Whatever you hear about 
DEB technology, it can't be 
tossed off as comic strip 
stuff, it is apparently for real 
and could probably be an im¬ 
portant factor in all ICBM 
decisions within five years. 

As the Soviets, not the U.S., 
are making the running with 
this technology, they least of 
all are likely to react to MAP 
with a massive addition of 
ICBMs. 

Since the U.S.S.R. has a 
mobile ICBM in advanced 
stages of development, going 
for a MAP system of her 
own would seem to be a ratio¬ 
nal response to the U.S. pro^ 
posal. However, whereas 
Nacht Implies that this would 
be bad for the U.S., he is only 
partially right. Her unilateral 
advantage of having sophisti¬ 
cated security for her silo 
missiles would be lost. On the 
other hand, If the Soviets 
spend vast sums on a MAP 
system, it should restrict 
their ability to replace older 
ICBMs with newer models. 

This could have a dampening 
effect on the arms competi¬ 
tion and be good for both the 
U.S. and also the aims of 
SALT. 

In firing at MAP from the 
hip — as it were — Nacht 
seems to have overlooked an 
important spin-off from the 
concept: IT both superpowers 
go for it, then the end result 
might be to rule out massive 
use of silo missiles by either 
superpower. In fact, (ailing a 
recognized U.S. superiority 
for strategic warfare — 
something that no longer ap¬ 
pears in any crystal ball — 
the MAP Idea could inhibit 
use of strategic ICBMs, even 
In token numbers as a bar¬ 
gaining chip in big powqp? gic game for'more than 
confrontations. decade.” 


Since this proposition sug¬ 
gests that silo ICBMs may 
soon be victims of advanced 
technology — even as battle 
ships were with the advent of 
airpower — the question 
arises, why bother with a 
MAP program at all? Why 
not let existipg ICBMs serve 
(Hit their remaining useful 
ness while withering on the 
vine 1 

Well, even though subrna 
rine missiles could be Ifli-'** 
proved to give them the 
readiness, simplicity of con¬ 
trol and accuracy character¬ 
istics of silo ICBMs. the sc 
curily which their mobili(> 
.currently offers is a wasting 
asset. Although bombers 
armed with cruise missiles 
have great promise, their 
merit is still only a promise 
and may remain so for some 
time yet. / 

So. not only will silo this 
sites continue to compel “a 
dispersion of adversary at 
tenlion. investiments and lo¬ 
gistic capability", they will 
be essential for support of 
forward-based allies Secure 
in the knowledge that she 
would always have a residual 
force, sufficient to deter at¬ 
tack on herself, the U.sl 
would have the option of a 
credible, limited first-use 
threat with tactical nuclear 
weapons, to ensure the favor¬ 
able outcome of any theatre 
crunch with the U.S.S.R. 

Having read this far, it is 
indeed to wonder how we 
ever got ourselves into such 
an expensive and apparently 
senseless fix with strategic 
missiles. But once having 
split the atom, there could be 
no turning back. The really 
astonishing thing about sub¬ 
sequent events is not the con¬ 
tinuing arms race; It is that 
having used atomic power 
only once In anger, its de¬ 
structive potential has been 
so successfully contained and 
that. 33 years later, the only 
certain future for strategic 
weapons seems to be a politi¬ 
cal. rather than military 
one. 

Make no mistake about it 
A credible strategic position 
works pervasively, day by 
day. in diplomacy. Whenever 
the strategic balance is con¬ 
spicuously in favor of one or 
the other superpowers, it will 
inevitably constrain aggre* 
sive foreign policies of its op¬ 
ponent. And “skeptics", as 
one writer wisely noted, “will 
have to explain why the 
U.S.S.R. — not known for ne¬ 
glecting the political lever¬ 
age of military power — has 
been competing so vigorously 
and expensively In the strate- 
a 


Bails Colonist 


185S 



rSts 

RICHAftO BOWER 
PUBLISHER AND EDITOR-IN-CHIEF 


1978 


LLOYD BAKER 
ASSOCIATE EDITOR 


FREDBARNES 

MANAGING EDITOR 


_ 






































r 


Most devious 
Grit instance 
of chicanery? 

I QUOTE FROM the Colonist of August 17; "Queen 
backs role change says Lalonde " 

This is the most devious instance of chicanery yet 
perpetrated by the government in Its long history of 
insults to the intelligence of the people of this coun- 
trv. 

TO SUGGEST (this) is particularly malodorous, 
perhaps lethally so. 

( . . Let's endeavour to get what we know of its- 
source into some sort of context. Evidently the Queen 
was made aware of the government's proposed plan 
for the monarchy by Mr. Basford on a visit to London 
in June. 

... We are further told that Mr. Trudeau raised 
this vital issue with the Queen during, of all things, the 
Commonwealth Games in Edmonton’ 

... Now, let’s look at this thing The Queen's 
polite acceptance of some tentative draft proposals in 
the parliamentary business of this country shoved 
under her nose or intoned into her ear is one hell of a 
long way from “The Queen has agreed (past tense yet > 
to the government’s proposals.” 

THERE ARE TWO very subtle and particularly 
nasty Implications being broadcast on the w ind by all 
this. One is the suggestion that our Sovereign may, 
after all, have a veto power in our legislative func¬ 
tion which Mr. Lalonde knows perfectly well she does 
not have. 

The other and by far the more dangerous is the 
horrendous suggestion that the Queen is politically bi¬ 
ased, in accordwith the present government, that she 
Is lending her support and agreement to this particular 
political faction's proposed course of conduct, that she 
has been privy to this scheme long before it has been 
properly laid out to the country and debated in 
Parliament, to say nothing of Us approval (if at all) by 
Parliament and the people in whatever final form it 
could ultimately emerge 

THERE IS ALSO the nasty appearance in all this 
that the monarch is being used as a political dupe, is in 
effect being used to charge the pistol that is to be put to 
her own head (and ours). 

... If such a stain were to become indelible in the 
minds of the people in this country the whole great 
towering strength that this office affords to the state 
would be destroyed. The single, most unique stabiliz¬ 
ing and unifying office in the British parliamentary 
system of government that with great good fortune we 
have managed to inherit is the monarchy. This 
strength derives essentially, however, from its im¬ 
maculate isolation from political bias. Although strong 
as long as it is understood and accepted it is. like 
democracy itself, vulnerable and fragile. 

SUPPORT FOR THE monarchy has not a damn 
thing to do with Anglophones. Francophones What 
it does have to do with is the fact that we. all of us. 
share this country, have shared Us centuries of heri¬ 
tage and mingled our sweat and common red blood on 
numerous battlefields to keep it. yes even between 
ourselves (have you never bloodied your brother's 
nose**) and all together we have it now 

The lusty democratic, social and cultural evolu¬ 
tion of this country has been enabled by (he monarchv 
and the Sovereign embodies all the spirit of this stiil 
today w ithout bias. . . The Queen currently represents 
and carries this heavy office without caring a toss 
about our political deliberations and divisions. The 
spirit of the monarchy is as strong and sustaining or as 
impotent and futile as we want to make it. 

NOR. STILL ON the subject, don't ask what is at 
the bottom of that slippery slope. I don’t have the 
space to tell you. Lubor Zink, Solzhenitsyn and many 
others have laid it out. Allow me to say briefly though 
what you won t find there; The spirit that built the 
early settlements and trade routes and that Jater built 
the West is not there. The spirit that kept the Canadian 
Corps slogging up to the crest of Vimy Ridge isn’t 
there. The spirit that inspired them to walk into hell on 
the Dieppe beaches is not there, that kept them 
blasting through Falaise Gap and up the boot of Italy, 
that isn’t there either. 

... We are equally (although much more subtly) as 
threatened today as we were during those episodes 
just noted. What are we going to do about it this 
time? 

SURELY WE CAN still develop an informed 
and interested electorate. In other words, we can 
continue to enjoy all these rights, freedoms and 
privileges only if we hwee Mifflcient responsibility to 
protect them and to band together with others who 
would do the same. 

So. monarchy is not so bad. It is not a four letter 
word but “work” is. Do we still have the vitality for it? 
Will we take the trouble to understand the dangerous 
seeds of ils own destruction that our great democracy 
has. by its very' virtues, lying dormant within it? Will 
we take the trouble to understand the acutely real 
significance and subtitles of “divide and conquer.” of 
“totalitarianism.” of “international terrorism” and 
‘ international communism?” Do we have a real 
gut-level understanding of their consequences? God 
knows we should have If we used our heads There are 
hundreds upon hundreds of millions of living human 
beings this morning w ho don’t have the right to tell us 
about it! 

MAYBE OUR GREAJCommonwealth of Nations 
properly united and working together once again, 
unashamedly and avowedly in partnership with the 
monarchy would in time lend example and inspiration 
enough for the world's subjugated peoples to shake 
free their fetters. Yes. that would be work, but why 


Punch 


T A 


BLACKWOOD, 
St Charles St.. 
Victoria. 


asfl 

0C1E2 

a 




m & 


& 


To the editor 





“They’re comfortable enough but I was hoping for 
something a touch funnier.” 



I hope the death penalty doesn’t come back. Have you 
any idea what a hearty breakfast costs these days?” 


Sour gripes 
on games 


Referring to your comment 
Aug. 18, Sour gripes on the 
games—and there were other 
such comments too, I believe. 

I am shocked and ashamed 
that as the host country' to the 
1078 Commonwealth Games 
you should speak of our guest 
countries as you did. 

A good host does the utmost 
U> make each .guest comfort 
able and simply does not 
criticise him as your paper 
has done. Furthermore, a 
winning athlete or sportsman 
n tint under any circum¬ 
stances turns on his less-suc¬ 
cessful rival with, in effect, 
the retort ‘Ya, you’re only 
iealous’. It would have been 
polite and certainly more 
dignified to have replied 
more along the lines of ‘Sorry 
if we didn't organize too well 
but we will do even better 
next time.’ 

After ail it was not realiv 
correct or fair for the host 
country only to have cheer 
leaders on the side of the 
sw limning pool cheering ex¬ 
clusively for Canada. Imag¬ 
ine the cost for those tiny 
countries with perhaps one or 
two athletes competing; and 
the resulting chaotic din from 
each country’s cheerleaders 
would have hardly been help¬ 
ful to the competitors or the 
spectators. 

Let's be jubilant about our 


Causeway scene 
‘was appalling’ 


I was born and raised here in Victoria, have 
always thought it to be a beautiful city. My job has 
called me away to Ottawa and I've not been home for 
almost four years, hence l thought it was due time to 
return for a short visit with my family. What I 
saw on the Causeway was appalling 

Those vendors are a sight and reminded me of 
v ultures preying on pedestrians for all the money their 
greedy fists could swoop -up. There’s no describing 
what that area now looks like in front of our 
beautiful Empress. God save Victoria... 

NANCY L. WELCH, 
357 Lyon Street N., Ottawa. 


success, but let's not forget to 
be good mannered hosts, or 
that the true spirit of sports 
manship also includes win¬ 
ning with dignity and grace. 

Our Commonwealth 
Games with its spirit of 
friendly belonging and sta¬ 
bility sets a fine example to a 
troubled world It woultfbe a 
pity to undermine this. It was 
Canadian news and TV re¬ 
porters that I first heard call 
our athletes‘really only sec 
ond or third raters’ in world 
competition. Such comments 
by the national media are 
subversive and can only un¬ 
dermine an athlete's confi¬ 
dence. 

I for one hope that their 
tremendous success in the 


lj)78 Commonwealth Games 
will give our Canadian ath 
letes a tremendous b<*>xt in 
confidence and ultimate suc- 
• cess in the 1980 Olympics 
THELMA MALIN (Mrs ), 
5479 Sooke Rd / 
RR No. 1, Sooke. B C. 


Self-appointed guardians of monarchy problem 

Queen can survive republicans 


During the last few weeks, 
since the government put 
forward its proposals for con¬ 
stitutional reform, there has 
been a great deal in the 
papers about the Queen and 
her place in the Canadian 
constitution. 

As one commentator put it, 
the monarchy can probably 
survive the republicans, but 
it is doubtful if the Queen can 
survive the self appointed 
guardians of the monarchy 
Rarely, if ever, has there 
been such an outburst of ill- 
informed comment by people 
who claim to support the 
monarchy, but in fact are 
simply using the monarchy 
as a political football, as an 
instrument with which to at 
tack the government Few of 
these people appear to have 
bothered to read the propos 
ais of the government on this 
question, or to have read the 
views of informed commen¬ 
tators. We have instead a de¬ 
liberate attempt to make the 
monarchy a political, parti 
san, issue, something thaf in 
my opinion it most certainly 
should not be. 

Most of these people who 
claim to support the mon 
arrchy appear to care a great 
deal less about the Queen 
than they do about changing 
the prime minister. Despite 
their so called support of the 
Queen, they appear willing to 
abandon her tomorrow if 
doing so would shorten the 
prime minister’s time in of¬ 
fice by a day. 

Let's look at the record. 
Eleven years atfo, In re¬ 


sponse to questions by the 
press, the prime minister 
staled that he saw no reason 
to change from a constitu¬ 
tional monarchy to some 
other system. Since then the 
Queen has been in* Canada 
more frequently than she. or 
her father or grandfather, or 
any other monarchy has ever 
been here before. In addition 
Prince Charles and his broth 
ers and sister, the Duke of 
Edinburgh, have been in Can 
ada time after time. Prince 
Andrew, in fact, was at 
school in Canada for six 
months only a short time ago 
These- visits, by decision of 
the Queen and the prime 
minister, have been informal 
and frequertt. 

The Commonwealth? Who 
was hailed by the British 
newspapers as the saviour of 
the Commonwealth at the 
Singapore meeting, when the 
organization was on the brink 
of collapse? None other than 
Prime Minister Trudeau of 
'Canada. Who played the key 
role in Scotland, some iwo 
vears ago which resulted in 
ihe Gleneagles Accord and 
the continuation of the Com 
monwealth Games? Again, 
none other than Prime Minis¬ 
ter Trudeau 

Personailv. I believe that 
the monarchy plays a t usefui 
symbolic role in our Cana¬ 
dian constitutional set up t 
believe it should be con 
tinued But the hysterical 
outbursts of partisan politics 
by people who wish only to 
attack the prime minister 


and couldn t ear* less about 
Ihe Queen makes me wonder 

if it can survive. _ , 

The value of the monarchy 
in-Ibis country is to a large 
degree its non-partisan, uni 
fVmg. influence By dragging 
the Qpeen into a Canadian 
election campaign, some¬ 


thing Ihe prime minister 
clcariv Mated.should be 


Inflation 


Let's have another look at 
that inflation rate list pub 
lished by Trevor Bryden of 
Victoria on August 26: 

1*74 1977 

24.5 8.1% <«> 
111 11.2% (I) 
16.9 9.1% (I) 

13.7 1.2% (3) 
11.4) 8.5% (5) 

11.8 9 . 8 % ( 2 ) 

19.8 4.7% (7) 
The way I read this list Mr 

Bryden is that Canada has 
gone from the sixth lowest 
rate of inflation of 10.8 per 
cent to second highest rate of 
inflation of 9.8 per cent. Italy 
is the only country here that 
is in worse shape in 1977 
If that list is meant to do 
tend the Liberal record. Mr 
Bryden. Gorde Hunter is 
right on target. You Liberals 
are more than myopic. You 



avoided, these people most- ar * witally blind! Blinded by 


certainly weaken, and may 
vet destroy, the very instilu 
non thev claim to support. 
DAVID ANDERSON.* 
P C). Box 211. 
Duncan. B.C. 


Trudeau s naive statement 
that Canada's inflation is due 
to world inflation rates 

FRED PERRY. 
1655 Robert Lang Drive. 

Victoria. 


Conclusion 
is wrong 

Mr. Munro has written a 
letter to the Colonist (Aug 
26th) in vybich he has offered 
his arguments on the role of 
the monarch as .contained in 
the proposals for the new 
constitution (Bill C-60). Mr 
Munro has based his argu 
ment on a comparative ex¬ 
amination of the role of the 
Queen contained in the BN A 
act against her role as ex¬ 
pressed in Bill C-60 
His conclusion seems to be 
that Bill C-60 proposes 
changes in the power of the 
governor general that will 
substantially alter the way in 
which our country is go 
verned This conclusion is 
based on the wording of the 
BNA Act where it outlines the 
monarch's perrogatives in 
Parliament and in law. 

However, in order to make 
a valid comparison it is 
necessary to take into at- 
count all legislation since 
1867 that pertains to matters 
constitutional. It is this body 
of legislation and not a single 
document that forms our 
present constitutional pro 
cess If Mr. Munro had taken 
the time to examine his argu 
ments carefully he would 
have discovered that the pas¬ 
sages he has cited from the 
BNA Act no longer apply 
* in the same sense as they 
were written.' 

Mr. Munro should know 
with ail his years in Parlia¬ 
ment that the governor gen 
eral is alread> empowered to 
act in his own right on behalf 
of the Queen without prior 
consultation. The powers and 
prerogatives that are nor 
mally held by the monarch 
had been delegated to a gov 
ernor general in the Letters 
Patent of 1947. In other 
words, (he ven thing that 
Mr. Munro is afraid shall 
happen has been going on for 
these pa si 30 years. 

I hope that Mr Munro du<« 
not propose to fight the bill in 
the house with such foolishly 
weak arguments. 

TREVOR BRYDEN. 

516 Lampson St., 

Victoria - 


ONE YEAR 

SAVINGS 

CERTIFICATE 



Withdrawable 
at Face Rate 


A new system 
of government? 


Cook production 
draws plaudits 

I am writing to say that I thoroughly enjoyed Whal 
Now Captain Cook ? at the Newcombe Auditorium recently. 
Kaleidoscope Theatre Productions and all who participated 
or contributed are to be congratulated 

The scenery and costuming were very Weil done which 
complimented the fine acting, singing and excellent mtisi 
cal support. 

Since the talent is obviously available, why is it that more 
auch shows are not produced for Victoria audiences? 

MARY STRATTON, 
2028 Garrick St, 
Victoria. 


In view of the possibility of 
a general election this year, I 
wonder what the public Tfe 
thinking Who do I vote for 
this time' 1 Will it make any 
difference 9 Where do we go 
from here 9 

May I suggest a new sys¬ 
tem of government? 

As we have four major par¬ 
ties. who represent virtually 
100 per cent of the people, 
why can t we utilize all the 
brains and expertise of all the 
parties. How do we accom¬ 
plish this? 

After the election, and all 
the candidates are in, the 
party that polled the most 
votes, would have the honor 
of selecting a prime minister, 
which is only fair. 

Now all the parties want to 
do their best for the people 
and the country. This is what 
we want and what we need. I 
suggest that any party can 
introduce a bill, after all the 

P arties have discussed the 
ill within their own'party 


When it come to a vote, 
only the leader of each party 
votes. It then takes three 
voles in favor of the bill be 
fore it becomes law. The 
leader that doesn't endorse 
the biU will have to state his 
reasons. 

•Now about the portfolios. I 
suggest that there is no min¬ 
ister of finance, but there 
would be a ministry of fi¬ 
nance, one from each party, 
with the knowledge and ex¬ 
pertise in this particular 
field. They work on the prob¬ 
lems together, and when they 
have • solution it is brought 
to the table for a vote as 
mentioned above,. 

The same applies to all 
portfolios. Economics, rain¬ 
ing, lands and forests, fish 
ing, oil and minerals etc This 
form of government would 
lake the onus off one party 
and spread the burden over 
four parties 

Could this be the answer? ' 

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UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS SHOPPING CENTRE, 
3986 SHELBOURNE, VICTORIA. B.C. 


• <- .-v 


fl 'DAILY COLONIST. Virion* B C’ Saturda\. SrplnnbtM 2. 

Russians aid 
Vietnamese 
with airlift 


WASHINGTON (AP) - 
The Soviet Union has con 
ducted a major airlift of mill 
tary and civilian supplies to 
Vietnam during the last sev 
oral weeks In the wake of 
worsening relations between 
Hanoi and its communist 
neighbors. China and Cambo 
dia. I S. officials said late 
Friday. 

One official, who declined 
to be identified, said the air¬ 
lift. involving 15 to 20 plane* 
with stops in Pakistan and 
India, ended within the last 
lew days. 

The official said some in¬ 
telligence reports indicated 
that the Soviets were sending 
technicians to replace Chi 
nose technicians who left 
Vietnam as tensions between 
Hanoi and Peking mounted 
during the summer. 

Soviet military advisers 
also are reported to be 
iboard some of the flights, 
ihe official said. It was also 
reported some of the Soviet 
military supplies would be 
used in Vietnam's border dis¬ 
pute with Cambodia, which h 
t>eing supported by China 


China , 
Japan 
gloating 

HONG KONG (UPI) - 
lapanese and Chinese offi¬ 
cials dug into a 500-pound 
< ake Friday and gloated over 
soviet discomfiture in a ceie 
bration of the signing of the 
sino Japanese friendship 
treaty. 

The New China News 
Agency said 2.500 Chinese 
and Japanese thronged the 
Great Hall of the People in 
Peking to observe a "new 
starting point in friendly re¬ 
lations between the two ooun 
tries. 

The treats, signed Aug. 21. 
includes a highly controver¬ 
sial clause rejecting "liege 
monism." China's term for 
soviet attempts at influence- 
peddling 

Above toasts and the cut¬ 
ting of the giant cake with the 
vhinese Ideographs for "dou¬ 
ble happiness ’ emblazoned 
m it io red icing, the head of 
the Chinese delegation 
icrnied the treaty a pledge 
•to work hard and contin 
uously so that the people of 
both countries will live in 
iriendship from generation to 
generation." 


A I S. official said it was 
not his impression that the 
Soviet airlift to Vietnam 
"was a one shot thing." 

"It was heavier than nor 
mal. but this (Soviet supply 
ing of Vietnam) has been 
going on for years^’ he 
added 


Central B.C. 

schools 

threatened 

PRINCE GEORGE 
(CP) — A lockout of non 
teaching employees was 
expected to prevent 22, 
000 Prince George-area 
students from attending 
the first day of classes 
following the summer 
break 

The 1.200 district teach 
ers were to meet Monday 
to decide if they would 
cross picket lines set up 
by operating engineers 


B.C. girls can dial a naval escort 


OTTAWA (CP) - It won t 
be just "any old port in a 
storm" when the British navy 
visits Vancouver later this 
month. 

This time the officers are 
setting up a dial-a-sailor sys¬ 
tem whereby callers can ask 
for a naval escort, specifying 
su( h attractions as height 
and color of eyes. Tor "social 
and sporting contacts." 

And there will be 1.500 to 
.choose from, fresh from an 
exercise on the bounding 
main off the West Coast 

There will be nine ships 
in th» fleet, six warships, a 


submarine and two auxiliary 
ships, the largest Royal Navy 
visit to Canada since the Sec¬ 
ond World War. 

The information service 
says rather than let the sail¬ 
ors roam the streets in search 
of companionship, the navy 
plans to experiment with a 
new way of developing "so 
cial and sporting contacts." 

People wanting to meet or 
entertain a sailor can call to 
fix a rendezvous—even stat¬ 
ing preference for height and 
color of eyes." 

The sailors, from the Royal 
Navy’s First Flotilla, will be 


in Victoria from Sept 0-11. 
before Exercise Marcot ’7# 
takes place. No dial*a-sailor 
program has been arranged 
for Victoria but a variety of 
activity* have been organ¬ 
ized for tars while they 
are in town 


A number of sports events scheduled between the Brit- 
such as rugby matches are ish sailors and local teams. 


THIS WEEKEND 


Island 
Saw Co. 


sir 


UPER 

ANSUI 

TEREO 

ALE 


HOUSE OF STEIN ON YATES 


ATSU 


NEW 1978 
DATSUN 
B210S 
$3,785 
($400 OFF) 

-4^ 


1978 
DATSUN 
SPORTRUCK 
$4,598 
($437 OFF) 

2620 GOVERNMENT 




J. 


v4* 






HW 




MISSES’ 

ACRYLIC 

CARDIGAN 


Fashionable Fall ft Winter 
cardigans In a variety of 
stylss ft colours Long 
sleeves. Sizes S-M-i 


Prices Lfte< live Saturday September 2nd Only • While Quantities Last We reserve the right to limit Quantities 


K mart Sals Price 


GIRLS’COMFY I GIRLS’CASUAL 

T-STRARSU OXFORDS 


Perfect for beck to ■ Sturdy school shoes 
school! Styled with ■ for the Itttte miss 
«sdge heel end crepe ■ Wedge heel 8i crepe 
like sole. Brown. ■ like sole. Brown 
Assorted Sizes. ■ Assorted Sizes 
mart Special Price H K mart Special Pries 


MISSES’ 

PLEATED 

SKIRTS 


Popular pleated skirts in 
assy-cart Polyester Elat- 
ticiztd waistband. Blsck. 
Brown. Navy. Carnal, Gray 
or Rutstt. 10-18. 

K man Aft* Salt Prise 11.Ot 
K mart Sait Pries 


FOCAL COLOR 

PRINT FILM 


AFRICAN VIOLETS 

Beautiful selection of colours 
K mart Reg. Price 1.97 each 

K mart Special PricB 


Size 110-12ft-35mm. 20 exposure 


K mart Special Price 

. - (MMM i par m — Win 


BARBECUE CHARCOAL 

BRIQUETTES _ OfT 

20-lb. beg 9.07 kg. e per #VI 

K mart Reg. Price 3.77 beg customer 

K mart Special Plica ■ 


BUZZ BOMB 

FISHING LURE 


mmmm 


Available in 2V to 4 width 


K mart Special Price 

(tan* • pm . 




FACIAL 

TISSUE 


100 tissues per pkg 
Assorted colours 
K mart A | 

Special Pries 0 fsr " 

(tan* t par m taima o 


DISCONTINUED LINES OF BUXTON 
BILLFOLDS, CLUTCH M mm 
PURSES & MORE M 


FANTASTIC 

MARKER PEN OR 
BALL POINT PEN 

As Advertised on T V 


parties and snacks. At 
our doll countar. 


K mart teg. Price 
1.07 each 

K mart Special Prica 


K mart Special Pries 




COLONIAL 

CREME COOKIES 


LUXURIOUS 

BATH TOWELS 


DeUctous creme assortment 
Net weight 7 ox —198 g 
K mart Reg Price 
09* pkg 

K mart A pkg 

Special Prica L «* 


Thick and Thirsty 
Soiid colours only r 
K mart Reg. Price 

7.#g each 

K mart 8pocial Prica 


Kmart 


BOYS’ S-16 

PULLOVERS 

by “PELLWr 

100% Virgin eoryHc 


LANDERS 

SHAMPOO OR BATH OIL 

Assorted shemoooe including Egg and Straw- 


Luxurious Buxton wallets at an 
affordabla prica!.Hurry In for 
boat selection on this assort- 
mont of tty tea, colours a 
Laathara. 

K man Regular List Pries 
FROM 100 TO *00 


Spocial Prica 


TO 


Ok. MO mL 

K mart 
Special Prica 


K mart Reg. Prioe 
6.44 eeoh 

K mart Special Price 


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DAILY COLONIST. Vlctoru. DC. Salurdi). September 2, l»> < 


Ontario junior 
cracks record 
for healthy lead 


SYDNEY. VS, (CP) - 

Dan Maue of Kitchener par 
layed his towering drives and 
red-hot putter into a record 
breaking six-under-par 66 
Friday to take a commanding 
lead after three rounds of the 
Canadian junior golf cham¬ 
pionships at the Lfhgan Coun¬ 
try Club. 

Mane broke the old mark of 
67 set by veteran amateur 
golfer Graham MacIntyre of 
Halifax, and his total of 213 
set him six strokes ahead of 
first-round leader Matthew 
Shaw of West Paradise, N.S., 
and Eric Kaufmanis of 
Aylmer, Que. 

Stewart Ranft of Port Carl¬ 
ing. Ont., had sole possession 
of third spot with a total of 220 
after firing a one over par 73- 
.1 can Louis Lamarre followed 
with 222. two strokes ahead of 

Beauchemin 
tops event 
at Qualicum 

QUALICUM BEACH - 
Rub Beauchemin tuned up for 
the Metro Toyota-CPAX 
open by capturing first prize 
money of *300 in the first 
annual Qualicum Beach pro- 
am golf tournament Friday. 

The Victoria lefthander 
fired a one-under par 71 to 
finish tied with Norm Jarvis 
of Vancouver in the 18-hoie 
test at Eaglecrest Golf Club 
and he one the playoff on the 
fifst extra hole Jarvis hit his 
tee shot out of bounds on the 
356-yard, par five hole and 
finished with a seven while 
Beauchemin took four shots 
to find the green but needed 
only a six-inch putt for the 
par 

Jarvis picked up 1356 while 
Tom Whittle of Vancouver 
shot 74 and won $250 and 
Jason Paukkuncn of the host 
club. Bill Wakeham of Cowi- 
chan and Bob Cox of Vancou 
ver shot 75s and earned $106 
each. 

Rookie pro Jim Rutledge of 
Victoria carded a 77 and Vic¬ 
toria’s Cec Ferguson shot hi. 

Whittle added another $125 
in winnings by leading his 
team to victors’ in the pro-am 
eveat. Eric Evans. Harold 
McColm and Harold Engle 
»on shared the victory with 
Whittle and curried home the 
top amateur prizes. 

Paukkunen. aided by Art 
Chapman, Frank Young and 
Rob Donaldson, picked up 
second money of $100. Jarv is 
earned another $75 with help 
from Dr. McBride. Bill Li¬ 
vingston and Ted Shephard 
and Wakeham earned an ad 
ditional $50 with support from 
his team of Rick Chapman. 
Don Crosby and A! Wood 
cock. 

Beauchemin. Rutledge. 
Ferguson, Wakeham and 
John Morgan of Victoria will 
gtve a free golf clinic 6 p.m 
today at the Cedar Hill Golf 
Club driving range in Vic¬ 
toria following the first round 
of the 36^hole $8,000 Metro 
( FAX Open 

U.K. soccer 

LONDON (Reuter) — Rnutto d> 
United Kingdom tocos' match#* 
piavdd Friday 

ENGLISH LEAGUI 
Ttnrd Dtvtttan 

Southtod 2 Plymouth 1 


fellow Montrealer James 
Duff. > 

Duff led after two rounds 
but never had control of his 
game Friday ending up with 
an eight-over-par 86. 

“I putted super today,” 
Maue said after turning in his 
scorecard. 4 *You have to 
make birdies when you putt 
like that no matter where you 
land on the green." 

Maue blistered the 6,600 
yard course with six'birdies 
and an eagle and broke the 
record despite bogies on the 
second and 12th holes. 

But the surprise at this ^ 
tournament has been the in¬ 
consistency of Shaw, the 
Nova Scotian junior cham 
pion. 

Shaw came into the event 
w ith the reputation of being a 
tough competitor, but has 
failed to mount a charge 
Kaufmanis was disappoint 
ed with his one over par 73, 
which included a double 
bogey on the seventh hole. 

Rick Gibson of Victoria 
shared 10th place going into 
(he final round with 228 after 
carding a 77. Lanny Saw- 
chuck of Victoria and Ian 
Harper of Nanaimo fired 80s 
and were at 238 and 240, re¬ 
spectively. while Glen Martin 
of Duncan had an 84 for a 246 
total. 

The final round will be 
played today to determine 
the junior champion. Quebec 
won the prov incial team title 
Thursday with a convincing 
15-stroke victory over New 
Brunswick. 

TOP HAND TIES 

0#n Meuc, Ont 73-74*6-213 

Matthew Shew, N S 64 7B72-214 
Erk Kautmeni*. Que 76-70-73—214 
Stewart Ranft. Ont 74-73-73—22} 
Jean Lamarre, Montreal 74 73 75—222 
James Duft. Montreal 74- 70*0—224 
David Ahem, Toronto 77 7071—726 
Cotin Moekal, Kitchener 74-74-74—277 
R Cardinal, Montreal 76-76-75-277 
Ricfc SCOP, ont 707077-72* 

Richard var*. N.B. 74-74*S-22» 
Rich GtbMft, VkSarta 707077—2* 
Richard Sovereign, Ont. 74-75*0-220 
Robert Killeen, Ont. 7*7077-219 

Dan Kodatskv. Ont. 77 72-H-H9* 

Rob Hoski, Wewa. Ont 76 75-70-229 
William Swartz. Toronto 79 7* 75—230 
jame* Lythgow, N O 77-76-70—231 
Scott Shonl*er, Ont 74-77-76-239 

Andy Mabie. n B 77 74*1-233 

Derek Thomtev. vane. 7064 76—233 
John Kelly, N S 0073*0-233 

Darryl James, Kamloops 11-707S-234 
Keith Westover, Vent 007076—234 
G Bannister. Xbb'Wrd 79 73*2-234* 
Daryl Currie. Winnipeg 11-77-77—235 
Matt Cote, Strattoid, Utl 75— 235 

Michael Hapkinv Ont. 70 77*0-235 
Peter Ham. Winmoeo 0OeO75—235 
Duncan Campbell, Ont 74-77-74-235 



Kite, Purtzer share early lead 


ENDICOTT. N.Y. (AP) - 
Tom Kite and Tom Purtzer 
shot five-under-par 68s over 
the 6.915-yard En-Joie Golf 


Tom Kite 
Tom Purtzer 
Ray Flovd 
Re« Cektwed 
Dan Edward* 

John Mahettev 
Artie McNickie 
Al Geiberger 
Bob Gilder 
Git Morgan / 
Bobby Walzei 
Dave Barr 
Ed Sneed 
Craig Stedler 
Don Iverson 
Greg Power* 
Charles Coodv 
Leonard Thompson 
Rod Curt 


George Cedlt 
Terry DteM 
Bill Garrett 
Mark Have* 
John Lifter 
Graham Marsh 
Bob Murphy 
Don Pootev 


Maue 

...•■ way to record 


Roger Maltbie 
Rob Ashby 
Tom Storev 
Tommy Valentine 
Mike Retd 


Club course Friday to share 
the first-round lead in the 
$225,060 B.C. Open golf tour 
nament. 

Their closest challengers 
were two strokes back. Artie 
McNickie. Rex Caldwell. 
Danny Edwards. Ray Floyd 
and John Mahaffey finished 
the first 18 holes of (he 72-hole 
tournament with 68s. while 
Dave Barr of Kelowna had a 
35-35—69 Also at 69 was de 
fending champion Gil Mor 
gan. 

George Knudxon of Toronto 
and Jim Nelford of Burnabv. 
the other Canadians in the 
event, fired 73s. 

Kite came into this tourna 
ment after missing the Hall 
of Fame championship by 
one stroke last week. Kite’s 
margin of defeat in that tour 
nament was a one-stroke pen 
ally he assessed on hipoself 
for an infraction no one else 
saw. 


"I’m playing well.” Kite 
said. ”1 know I’m playing 
well I’m excited about play¬ 
ing. 1 just wish they would let 
me play more than 18 holes a 
day.” 

Purtzer said he was 
pleased with his start. The 
Phoenix, Ariz., golfer said he 
tuned up his game by practis¬ 
ing with Lee Trevino and Don 
January. 

Trevlnn finished the day six 
strokes behind the leaders 
and January was trailing by 
eight shots going into today's 
second round. 

Rob Ashby, a 24 year-old 
rookie pro from Sanford. 
Fla . made a strong, but brief 


fem. 

more 


challenge to the leadi 
Ashby, who missed 
than two months of his first 
tour recovering from a heart 
ailment this spring, was 
shooting four-under par most 
of the day. 

Ashby bogeyed the final 
two holes and one of his shots 
struck a spectator in the 
face 

Ashby finished four strokes 
behind Kite and Purtzer. 

“It’s just been a bad year 
for me," Ashby said after his 
last two bogeys knocked him 
off the leader board. 

Adam Adams scored a 
hole in one on the 221-yard 
fourth hole but still finished 


16 Strokes off the lead with a 
^76. 

Friday's round was played 
under clearing skies after 
heavy /ain flooded several 
fairways and washed out play 
on the first day of the tourna 
menl. Play was extended one 
day with the final round res 
cheduled for Labor Day. 

The tournament is named 
after a cartoon strip. 

POLONY 

w MOTOR INN a 5 K 

THE SIDE DOOR 

IS OPEN AND 8 
THE GIRLS ARE BACK* 


CUBS ON ON COOK 


FOR COLOUR IN THE GARDEN NOW 
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FOR LIFE 

t 

RESEARCHED AT U.B.C. 


Recently published rasultt of 
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new, simple, pleasant way to 
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Proven effective for even heavy 
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75% to 95% of the smokers who 
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If you want to stop smoking, or 
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Smokers who wont to atop 
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9 30 to 5.00. P.iC. 1177 
W Heatings 


Ask your builder 
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it sa fact if you m buJdmq 0 r buy^g a nfW no mo the 
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THIS PLAQUE IN THE 
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WAY” TO SAVE MONEY 
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ASK YOUR BUILDER. 


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CUBBON, 1720 Cook Street and 2650 Nob Hill Road, Victoria. 
DOMAN BUILDING SUPPLY CENTRES, 280 Bay Street, Victoria. 
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REVELSTOKE, 449 Gorge Road East, Victoria. 



12-LB. BAG 

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47 


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ASK YOUR 
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CUBBON IN COL WOOD 














































































































































, f —JF. ~>4V.X«r Ji 


8 DAILY COLONIST, Victoria, B.C., Saturday Srpuniber 2. 1978 


TORONTO (CP) - Rec 
ords tumbled for the second 
straight day Friday as oil 
fever pushed the Toronto 
stock market sharply higher 
in heavrirading. 

The TSE 300 index made a 
record one-day jump OL 22.80 
points to 1255.01. The previ¬ 
ous highest single-day in¬ 
crease was 21.84 on Dec. 22, 
1076. 

compared with 4.95 million 
Thursday. 

A total of 2,601 contracts 
were traded on the options 

DHtrtbofed toy CP 

Toronto Stock Exchange Up. I 

Compete tabulation of Friday trans¬ 
actions Quotations to coots uni#** 
markod $. l—Odd lot. xp—€x-dlvt- 
dend. xr—Exrlghfs. xw — Ex-war- 
rantv Not change is from previous 
board-lot closing sale. 

Stack Sates High Law Clew cEt 

wlrfM 

J& 15 a* las’ 4 iS*- 7 

» a a & u 

It Min too $9*", t i P%a', 


Toronto trading 


market, compared with 1.228 
Thursday. 

A block of 86,000 Abitibi 
shares traded at $17 led the 
158 block trades. A block of 
48,000 Toronto Dominion 
Bank shares traded at $201,. 

A 10,000-block of Gulf Can¬ 
ada-traded at $34 >4 and a 
30.000-block of Kaiser Re 
sources changed hands at 
$16. 


Advances 29ft 312 

Declines 162 ici 

Unchanged 20? 239 

C Chib A 9630 «<• * 6 , 

• RL 7SS0 S46 44 46 ♦ 3 

J«U B 100 Wi tti Wi 
i Cam A 700 $11 11 11 

L<Tp 300 S17>, 17'* 1 Ti ♦ -4 

*\ 8*%^ 

at 7650 tlt*4 m* im ♦ >« 



_ Pakr* C 
Can Perm 1! 

C Per in 4-4 

Trust 7 1 * 

Tung 
‘iblesy A 
i Cat 21! 

Wan A 
Curtis 
For most 
Found dt 

it _ x 

Hidrooas 4100 44$ 
Honwstf 30900 $10’ 


. lu* im < 

$22®i 22'i 2?J« ♦ ' 
$1ft». Wl 1034-*' 
i2T , 27'. 27 i 


J5 » 5 j 5N ♦ >4 

m* &•» a* 4 

IB 

“ - 2 


4335 

£ 


civ, a, 




Ang ( 

Aoulh 
Aros H» p 
Argot B pr 
Argus C pr 210 


a samara 
Asbeafa 


29625 120-. 20 
473 S4S’« 45V, 


81 NS 
Bankene 
B Qto N 
Beckef B a 
Beil Canad 

B n 0 

n 2 .; 


ball 

Bail 


s 

pi fP5 It,.* •« 

JT4 |i 31W ♦ '* 

MO 124 24 24 

1700 STT 1 * Fa 77'a f v« 
Bath (,00 A (30 Sip* 1f»* IS** 
B'ltmort I JlO m 475 47S v|$ 

t£J. 

4. 


. jswgd A 
B'ocfc Bros 
Bombr 

BOw V 6 ly . 

Braior Pas „ 

B'amaiaa ION 

B'-amaoa 60* 

Brascan A 310,, Wi . , . 

1000 far*. #-• . 

Branded 30575 fl4», l 13*» ♦ *« 

“ Tt A 920' H3'. 13-4 13 1 ! — «4 

» 19030 Tt 7H ♦ U 

z , > 2000 fit If*. li t • 

B- Pack B 500 ON 00 10 

BC Phone 15942 $17 t 16 * 17 - V* 

BCPh 414 t(B SI#Vi It 4 16 

B r Ph I*. p 137 174 

fruntwk 10259 4J5 4IQ 423 *10 


|rgl 

tSjf 


„ lil -3 

to; • ♦ T| 

7t-i ?73|— ( 

> la 


n - '; 


«* 10250 425 410 4; 

Auto 110 O lgy r > 

Aw M 7B 243 l . 

Fen 1000 tU i I2»t 1) j a ' 

fit.’- 



Dome Mine 4851 
Dome Pete 71198 
D Bridge 200 
D Cttrs A 1100 
OCttl 147100 
DOfttCO A 1215 
Dom Store 576$ 
D Taxtle A 
Domtar 
Domtar pr 
Dunda Pal 
Du Port - ■ 225 
‘ I LM IOO 

el.T* '3 

E-L Fin w 000 
Past Mai t5S 

isk.* m 

kg* ns 

Electro A im 
3M0 


aufv 

F Watty Tr p 

Paw. 

F City F wt 

Ford Cnda ... 
Francana 2006 
Fr*wr A 




Ol^ 7I'S 71* i 

Sin V* 

4 ? HI? -* 

sr 4 0 • ij t ♦ *1 

879 1 » 79* 1 7W-5 - *T 

to • m 1 , ♦ 

%Srt iT'i Jr* ♦ >, 

Slow 10 • 10' 4 4 1| 

450 4tt 44 420 

$ 7 > 4 t* r * 

S7? 71’. 711* 

*32 i 31 37*4 4tV> 


ui j 

rfc 




VM, ,B * 

Cad Frv a ijjo si 
Ca Pow A 5054 U0 
« P 10 O 40 tlU II 
,al P 9J0 1101112 ill 

awk jHM 

Calvert 22500 70 j 
Cam Mine 77Q0 34 
Corrffto 11585 tU I 


Vancouver 

VANCOUVER (CP) - 
PrictB were up In modtntely 
active trading Friday on the 
Vancouver Stock Exchange 
Volume was 3,355.31$ 

In the industrials, Hal 
Roach Studios was up .40 at 
$2 on 32,100 shares end 
Grouse Mountain was un¬ 
changed at 7ft oh 6*100. Gol¬ 
ds le Investment A was down 
.20 at $4.50 on 6.100 

On the resource and devel¬ 
opment bmard. McConnell 
Peel Warrants was up .03 at 
l? on 111,000 shares and 
Great Hercules Resources 
was down .13 at $1.25 on 7L- 
401. Consolidated Kalco Val¬ 
ley was up .07 at .44 on 70,- 
300. 

On the curb exchange. 
Grove Explorations was up 
.07 at .92 on 49.900 shaaae and 
Aurus Mining was up .02 at 
.40 on 47,500. United Gunn 
Resources was up .07 at .77 on 
47,200. 


,r«in R. L 

“xk 2150 S10 

Trst 100 $4) 42 ' . _ _ 

>» .JlISjRR.i. 

“ a S,u.:!. 

jTsC u r4 r, ♦ •, 

D N I 

MO ST! 

my C 100 |7'« 

m Otv 7000 |11', 

N» A m fTi . . . 

•toon* 6200 119 lit lit 

lison 4791 000^* 00 ao — a* 

h4n 1 5500 It 74* V* 4 , 


compwtt tabulation «t Priaav tr ana- 
a • n* Quci*fi#m, in cam* unwn 
m#rh#0 o. Nat chanb# Is tram prtv'ou* 
clew et same lot tyo*. 

»* « »W » 

iMU'l MW 'if* 

vs as s i» » 

■nk 


I S6M* 4V) 41-4 4 

$44 « , 44 431. 

> $40 37'/. 40 4 3 

i tie. “ 

123 

1 $44' 

S4I-. 41. 41 
$»( 46*i 40*a 

ttr * ^ 5 - 

LHto 

* — s 


'i 

ill 


ina Div 

taw 

Iht Voeu 


$13'. 13. 13’. 
i S16’» M«* (67, ♦ 
i $16*« IS'* 16** ♦ 




176 40 

JM W 1 t . ^ 

2^8 250 215 2i 

———« 47 47 4, 

1I» 19 10 10'; —»' 


‘Jirmlt 


Muato C 
aw o p 
N Cinch 
a«at 
H from 
Hrn Min 
a FrMr r 
n Cal 1600 si 

aorco 3100 L 

- « | 


Money 


The benkt pur cheap price at U.9. 
fund* In this eree Friday, according 
to the Koval Bank of Canada, mat 1.1460 
for cash. 1.1440 for traveller* cheoue* 
and 1.1060 fur com*. Their *elimgprice 
was I.IS9S tor cash and 1.1143 tor che 
out* 

MOaTKBAL (CPI - U S. OOllar in 
-term* of Canadian fund* cloaed F r me v 
down 9-100 at *11495. Pound •tarlinf 
was up 131 100 at 17.3419. m Naw York, 
the Canadian dollar wa* up 3-M at 
$0.1699 and pound *tarlliig was up 13-10 
at$1.934S. 

Nominal tailingprlcootothar morhoft 
m Canadian funds: Australia Mr 
1 3791; Austria i^flWne mm Saba- 
mas dollar I.V460/ Barbados dollar 
.5700; Baffhim convertibfa 'franc 
.03700; Barmuda dollar 1.1460; Brazil 
cruaeiro 0654 ( Bulgaria lev 1.3309; 
China ranmlnbf .4B40; Colombia Paso 
03262 Czechoslovakia crown j»0; 
Denmark krone 2095; Bast Carr (bean 
dollar 42S0; Franca franc .2643; West 
Germany mark .1710; Or Sica drachma 
0324; Mono Kong dollar 2445, Hungary 
tor Inf .0301. India rupee .144$; Italy 
lira 401375. Jamaica dddai .7260, 
Japan yen 006090; Maxico peso 0S19; 
Netherlands guilder .5350; New Zes 
isnddoiiar i .2137; Norway krone iwQ; 
Pound zloty .0363, Portugal escudo 
0066; Romania lag .7176; South Africa 
rand 1.3312; Spain pasat# .01552; Swe 
dsn krons .2610; Swltisrland franc 
7035; U S S R rubls 1 6297, Vsnaxufia 
bolivar freo 266? 


Trading was halted for 
about two hours in Dome Pe¬ 
troleum, Dome Mines and 
Gulf Canada following re- 

ACTIVE STOCKS 

Slock Salas MM tow Close area 

Abitibi Pa 409158 SVTS 16*417 ♦ \ 

Norcen Er>.T74317 $18'. 16 1 ? 17*, ♦! , 
Kaiser Re* 164220 Sl6'« 14'. 16 ♦!*« 

Kamkof wo *75 

SSVm H*" 

Pennant R 71419 |9 7| h «8 

Cn 48500 “ “ 

Ulster P 1092050 
Place Ge* 1961)1 
Lochiei E 193100 


ports of a major oil find in the 
Beaufort Sea area. 


39 Jl’a *3', 
leO 203 4-43 
W 205 e2? 
330 375 +4i 


TSE M INDEX 
* we O 
II et_ 

. 77 423.8 1047.77 _ 

1139 34 - 2 94 1152.97 919 49 
1704.16 4 91.49 1704.06 1305 89 
100996 417-46 101U7 17261 
1394.66 4 2$ 1397J? 1211.13 
1119.63 45.02 1I31.C 101.77 
1047.77 *23.75 117119 11609 
179057 4 12 26 im» 134.62 
1562 06 ^ 74 1^00 1,^- 

1471.9$ 4 30 90 151. 

1328 09 * 30.27 1328 
1670 10 ♦ 10114 1670 
2026.7* -12.91 2040 


IjEl 

Mmerah 
Financ’l 
Oil, Gas 

S m 

Consum 
Meah 
Forest 

mi 

Manage 

Comm 
Golds 
iuildmg 

UP 1 1 down 3. Vofumt 7 0S million (4.9S 
million), valuel7l.il million 


MARKET 

REPORT 

Closing quotations tor Friday. Sept. 1.1*78 

<9 • 


inv Group 
mv Grp A 52S 

rtO 


7200 

1 


66 -47 62-3 

g 27 V 

_ m 72 77 77 

la le*o 15000 »S 65 45 


k*m l 

Kind* 


Grp A 
Grp 5 p 

... in T A 

\T‘ UI 

ivaco a 
J annock A 
Jannock B 700 
jannock I 100 
Jannock w 950 
Jorex Ltd 6000 
Joutei 400 
Ka»*er 164220 
Km Kt# 158100 
Kaos Tran 23M 
Keeprite B 600 
Kehev H m 
Karr A A 3750 

KotfWp 18 ' 
Labatt A 6888 1 
Labatt A p 
Lab Min 

cacana 

t 

LOnt Cam 1 
L Shore 
lakeheed 2 
Lasltr Km 

K* ,! S 

Leigh inst 510 
Levy A pr IM 
Ubsrian 475 
LL Lac zlt 
Lob Co • 250 

lob 110 AO Z20 
Lob Ltd-Bo 325 
LOChil 193800 
LOtl River 1000 


812 ; 12 * 
IIT* 12 i 
S21 21 : 

460 4SS a 

SlS»a IS 
155 150 II 
UM i? * 

$20’ 4 20 '. : 

5o> i 20 ': 

SIS 1 * 1$h 
S13 1 * 13*'* 

43 41 < 

ri 7 

$16. 14'« 
410 310 J 
159 ISO II 

sin* n • 

I* I* 


Normait 303 
Northid 5000 
Nowsco W 950 
Nu-wst A 150 
Nl ■ A'St p 1000 
Nudiama 1000 
Nuforf Res 10666 
Norntc^ *36346 
OPI A 1100 

p ’5’2? 


Ocelot A 

Or chan a 
O shawa A 
Oihaw# * 
Oxford A 


1100 

4500 

15250 

4500 

■ 

2500 


S43 43 , 


S7*k 

|! K 

3 S 

$18 . 18* 

$19 19 

390 330 

5$ 55 


255 

19 ♦ '« 

375 * 45 

55 — 4 


:mo 
Z 20 

4 00 
■ 
500 
H 


MOS Heith 

MICC 
MICC A 
MTS inter 

Madam A 
Mclan H A 
MB Ltd 

Madeline 1300 
Magna mt ziO 
Magneton 3050 
Magnates 2600 
Meistc Ml 1800 
Maatex M 6M 
Maritime mi 
Maiiim A p zTO 

Market F 200 

Man Far 49501 

Mas F A 4105 

Mas F B 3055 

Malomi A *00 

Me Aoam 3000 

Mt intyre «5S 

Maaghin aeo 
MCLOhi 9 p 100 

2S£* ,B 

Mentor 9*M 
Mercanfil 31M 
Merland E 2011$ 

Saar « 

voison A 6400 

Wson B IM 

v onanco A 500 
MB Trual IM 
Moot# 437$ 
Mum acc <m 
7/urohy llfli 
N B Cook 
NaChr* l 
Nat Trust 
Nemco 
Naomar 
NB Tel 

3 SR* 88 

H Proved D 500 
N Que Ragl 800 
N Senator 1000 
N York O-l 59650 
NflO LP A 90Q 
.Nfid Te» joo 
N tidTtiA m 
Ntld Te 9’5 400 
Ntki Te 185 300 
Ncv R m 5-00 
Noma A »00 
Norarxn A 12*00 
Norbaska >9500 
Norcn 174317 
Norcen B 100 
Norcn 150 1300 

Nordafr A 1100 
Normick P 2100 
NC OiK 2893 
Nor Cl 2600 r25 
Nor Ct 7ISo 1000 
Nor Tel J475 
NTecm B w 100 


19 O 

854 S', $•-,♦. 
$11 11 II - 

$27»«. 77*4 TT. 

37 36 36 -2 

$44 46 44 *1'. 

SW? 16 . 16'4 4 . 

123'. 72 * 23 ♦ '% 

m 3M 330 420 
S 711 711 -7 

265 245 366 4 U 

24-4 24’.-'. 
$*. 9'4 9 ; « 

S 6 ** 6*6 6Vi-»4 

$13'* 12 J i 13 4 »■» 

W: i. lfc:f 

SI) 1 * II II 1 * 4 H 

31 30 31 

*5’> 25’^ Wt 

$7’| T% ?•- *e 
I22S 27*» 27*1 4 < 4 
340 3M 310 
S13V* 13*4 13', 

315 305 315 4 10 

$14 13*» 14 ♦ '• 

MH M* 9 — M» 

mi 30-k 20* - ♦ '• 

m v ns m 

S20M ioN 20N- '4 
- S35 3 * 35 3SN 4 N 
i 8 $N 5N S 1 '*- N 

2 33 

i m. isi iB -1 

I $22 ’4 22 72'4 * 

I 9', 94 94 
I 16 I* 16 

45 45 45 -2 

>50 ISO ISO 
10 10 10 

350 28? 299 *14 

$17 17 17 - . 

$ 10 . ! 0 > to* 

$19*i 19** I9»i- > a 
$22>. TT* 22*. 4 
1224 22 , »«,- >4 
26 26 26 

$94 r* 9 • 

$32 • 324 

50 47 

$18'. 164 
124 34 

S264 25’« 

m «L -r 

$6 5 J . 6 ♦ 4 

1134 131. 134 
$34 34 34 

S264 264 364 
$364 36 36 * ♦ 4 

$144 144 144 - 4 


♦ »* 


p*c coper 1500 
Pac Nth G 100 

pV« m 

^p 7 % 

Pimotr A 400 

Pen Cantr zli 

' 

Pembina _ 

Pennant 714' 

p Dept s if 

(Mi „ 

Petrol 5750 
Peyto Oil* 1950 
P'ne Po-nt 1735 
Place G 196150 
Placer 15131 
Plvv 840 400 

Pominex 52500 
Pondar 100 


Pr*,r»e Oil NM 
P^ecamb 44200 

wt. cw 

KSTc«,i8 

Qasar Pet 4200 
Out Sturg 27200 
Ram 15400 
Ranaar *700 
Rank Qrg |fi 
Ravrock 360 
Realty Cw 1000 
Radpath a 1010 
Redstone 12000 
Par A2SS66 
R Sth A 5300 
ReichhoKt 1550 
Reich 74 p 1000 
Rt<Ch wt 19-7 
Re-iman A 200 

SStfft 


K-wy* u n 

Rio Algom 135 

R LiWe 163 

Roiland ;'C 

Roman 
Ronald Fd 
Ronyi Cor 
Rothman 
Rothm A p 
Qo'im M 

Koval Bnk 
Rpyel Tr A 
RutMl H 
St Febien 
SandweM A 
Sceptre 

SS'4 

• W ■ ‘tc 
Scott* A 1*00 
Scurry Rn 1J5J 

'00 
3000 
18052 
8682 


$5, 54 S',-'* 
17 164 14*»— 4 

154 54 54 

$16* W4 164* . 
$20 20 20 —4 

32 37 5 *Va 

25 24 244 

$23 J ’. 2r, 23 i ♦ ». 

$174 17 174 * 4 

IS S 18 if 

$14 13* 14 * 4 

$134 13". 13A#- *^ 
415 400. 400 -15 
$8 r,_-, 

? 2 2 
$17 17 17 

19 S 

191 190 190 -5 

410 410 410 *10 

f! fi 

$124 U4 1^* ( i 


Sbir ,.w.. 
Strathrn A 
Sud Corn 
Sullvan A 
Super lor A 
Superior E 
Surpass C 

Teck Cor A 
‘ i Cor B 


11071 $29 
m 350 
100 $21 
150 U5 
100 1114 

m B 


2300 $74 
T fa ] 
640 S* . 

2233 $' . 

9000 V»8 
z20 $95 

92?5 $24 
300 $46 4 


6 ". 


ft 

$36 (54 36 ♦ i 

S17 16*’. 17 *4 

St 78a Pa * i 

$134 134 

$714 Trrirs * • 
455 ib & * 15 

*224 27 22^ * ♦ 4 

208 18? 205 . 22 

$264 23*. 26*« ay* 
$26 4 264 ’26’.- '• 
IM IS 90 ♦ 5 

190 190 190, ♦ 9 
$54 51* r, 
flf. 1F4 Wi ♦ 4 
$114 184 If. ♦ 14 
330 315 325 .15 
$104 P4 l| ♦ • 
$114 17* 10 *4 

119*1? 191: ♦ 4 

$16, 154 144 
SIT* 12 17 - 4 

723 207 220. ♦ 9 
$104 94 M - . 
1174 16N 17' a ♦ 4 

jr*«r«rTi* 


Teck <__ 

Te* Can 
Texaco pr 
Txsolf 
T.gif p 

Thd CGlnv 100 $17», _ _ 

Thom N A 33100 $144 144 144 m 

Thom N or 1» $464 46' . 464 > 

Toromont 500 300 390 400 « 

Tor Dm Bk 99150 82) 204 204- 

Torstar • 1495 $1?-. 174 174 . 

Tor Sun 225 S134 134 134 , 

Total P«t 27470 $161* 144 154 a 

Total PA» J “ ^ 

Ten P*t w - 
Traders A 

II 


TrCan PL 
TrCan B Or 


100 S3? B 32 
BOO $9 « 74 8 

^ $184 184 104 
I $474 47"I, 47', 
' 164 • 64 44 

$6 S4 4 


Z2$ 1 


TrCan C pr 
Treco Inc 
Trimac A 11)0 $24 
c 912 - 


17 174- 

30W 30*.- 


224 24 . 

Trc f.12 100 $28 28 21 

tins iSS •» if If J 

Trinity Res 37825 465 445 465 < 

Trizac w 3000 T. 34 34- 

Turbo Cl A’ 900 $6 , 64 6’. 

Turbo Cl B 11515 *J6-i 6": 64 

Turbo Pr 1100 1304 204 204 < 

ufifir P 092050 215 160 20 > 4 


Un Carb-d 

UGas A 
UGas Po 
‘ l OH 


164 164 
58 99 a 7 

94 94 ♦ 4 


14 14 

•164 

60 

M .1 

$114 114 114 ♦ 
$114 114 114 ♦ » 
$15 la* a 15 
874 74 T , 

8174 174 17''« 

11$ Oil 113 ♦ 1 
124 120 124 — 1 
835** 344 354 ♦ 4 
320 305 310 ♦ 5 
M’i $• 84— 4 
1304 294 30 ♦ 4 

rjrjrtf 


834 334 334 a 

8194 Wp 194 
birN 12*a 124 ♦ 'I 
12 11 11 — 1 
$104 104 104 
804 PS 14 ♦ 1 
SW', 114 114 
228 225 225 
$31 304 31 

$7*. 1»S Ti 
m ?4 f 


U Keno 
U S'scoe 
un Tire A 1300 265 

Un r^- - 

uw 

UtHyr,_ __ . . 

U Sect ors 100 «6 J 

VS Serv A 700 $8 

Vantiar 
Ver»t1 Cor 
vwrsh Cor 
C « 


TO „ „ 
$184 184 184 
4858 $1? 114 1? « 

3M $264 264 264 * 
2600 $19 4 17 / 19 . 

Tm im w * m . 

1600 613 1 . 134 134. 
T025l 810V? 10 . 104- 
mr 814 8 I - 


union OH 

XXX, 

‘ leno 
i'scoe 

Tire A 1300 265 - 260 380 

T lfjr J* 

vr Gat 2200 $104 104 M4 


versti C 

vastorw 

Vic G 4 


tt £ 

$15 144 144- 

^ W 207 Jfi 

1600 $104 10»i 104- 

. 

1400 $104 10 >04 

400 400 400 400 
2M $18 II 10 - 

350 $114 114 114- 

A ’i8 VF&'X" 

WO 435 425 435 4 

STM 12T 111 130 - 
Wl 8104 20 20 - 

U2j 0 $34 374 394 a 
5900 $'74 114 124 - 
3W7 $12 ii, r: 
1375 300 296 300 
100 $214 21, 214- 
157 $12 12 12 


-10 


SMgran 

Sean*/ 


S5-S 3“ 


S moion 5 
Sklar M 


300 $34 
vovager/ 11100 $'4 
Vulcan ind ' 
v.afrbord 
walnoco O 
wijax A 

we k gw ; 

w«l Redkp 
Wardilr 
Wdntn 
Weidwod 
MMg ma 
Wcoast Pt 
Wco«t T 
vveoatt w 
Westeel 

Hr tjs is til is: 

Watmh|t 5M 821’, S': 9. - 
WntmiTl 100 95 95 95 ■ 

A’eston too 8194 194 1? • - 
Wstn 4' * :: 859 59 59 

While PA 200 81*4 16 16 , 

V.honok A 4532 $74 74 ,7-. 

W-ilrov 6800 274 266 24 « 

Win Eld 2000 13 13 13 

Wlx Coro 7200 $7-. 74 74- 

.'.oooreef 8000 45 45 45 . 

Aoodwd A 460 $70 10 . 20 « 

Wrlw-d 60C $84 84 8 . . 

Wr Harg Za5 1»S IIS 115 

YCR Proo 4350 *25 : 2$aa 25 a 
Yk Bear .0200 $6 74 *4 4 

York Con* 1000 53 S3 S3 

Y Lambton z)17 40 40 40 

ir. c . a^.n.’L: 


-260 250 250 -10 
I JUH 74 7>. - «tf 

295 29S 295 .7 

lM 1 72 

i 827 264 7? ♦ 1 

.R? ,tr* .!!•’ * .* fww vn iT« »ir, u • i, 

I 8174 74 l?-a *4 c Prm un 4W 804 V, 8 


BBC • un 

BM Rt un 


650 $ e, le. 
7925 tty’s IS . 15 . 


i Baitr w 500 
Lon Wt 5000 

mc m w ii iooo 

MCP Wt 4000 

P Cvp 
SUV wts 



200 200 200 

10 10 10 —2 

15 11 17 .3 

48 41 40 -1 

4 


El Coco 
Envoy 

0*6. ' 


Z If, Ik ft-v. 

INDUSTRIALS 

Z25 95 95 95 

B ,8 B .. 

z20 8374 37 . 374 
500 $9 9 9 

2900 195 190 190 

200 $23 , 23 4 234 
1300 20 20 20 

1000 SH'a 114 114 
2000 17 17- 17 




..v .... 1200 $404 4 S 4 ao* 1 

a j *9 4 9 

Waror 100 430 430 430 

Warrants ana Rights 

BC rf z300 145 165^165 

VANCOUVER CURB EXCHANGE 

IOOO 75 . 

5000 45 
•11500 95 
3000 95 



210 210 210 -» 

^ 120 112 IM ^10 

_ ^ 700 35 3$ 35 

Vkn Rav 2300 30 30 5 

Warrant 1 ani t.«Ms 

8^114^ U 16 II ♦! 


40 
M 

3000 40 

■ { 

'JM ?0 


Livestock 

CALGARY (CF) - Receipts at lit* 
Caioarv public stxkvards Friday fp 
♦ailed 279 head, melnlv slaughter cows 
and faedar steers. Slaughter cows met 
a good local demand at steady prices. 
Thar* war a no slaughter steers or heif 
trs on Otter D) 2 COWS 41.50-43.50, D3 
39 »4I. DS 36.S0-39.50. Feeder cattle 
were mostly over 100-pound short-keeo 
feeder steers in good condition, how 
ever, lest week 7 * tep^uelltv cattle 
were not present. Feeder steers met a 
good local demand at steady prices. A 
tew 700-pound fpeder heifers elsotred 
ed tullv steedv. Feeder cows were 
steady Good feeder steers over 100 
pounds 64-70, 700 600 pounds 64 7U 75 
Good feed tr heifers over 700 pounds 
59-64 7$. Feeder cows 43-52.50. 

Montreal 

CLOSINO AVERAGES 
"dustnels were up 5.17 at 204.10 
utilities 12? at 190.06 and papers 1.56 at 
'42.35. Banks were oft 0 53 et 286 /4 
volume was 635 399 



actions. Quotations 
marked!. Net 
boerd-lof cl 

Abacus Pr* 

Acroll 

Ameren Chr 



•o a 

7? 

♦ 7 

Baron* 

n| l 

21 . 

30 ♦? 

2* 26 

76 

♦ 1 

Bearcat 

100 400 

400 

400 

100 96 

■ 

♦ 2 

Ob** 

900 245 

245 

245 -5 

40 35 

4G 

♦ 9’. 

Ciearpori 

40.00 460 

425 

42* >5 

119 ..119 

119 

♦ 3 

Cummrd 

■ I 

10 

10 

45 35 

45 


Cjnventcr 

-800 $6'-1 

. 6, 

6’. ♦ 

43c 400 

4. 

♦ 40 

Fl'n Flon 

1500 60 

60 

60 ♦• 

55 S4 

55 


Gold Llkt 

1200 195 

119 

119 -6 

70 6’ 

’0 

♦ 1 

Helena 

toot no 

110 

110 

1 1 

f 


Hc*e Sound 

2000 SO 

50 

50 -2 


2J56.3II 

Kintfa 

200 IjO 

130 

140 


Commodities 

Mver^New Ysrk (per Mlai.) 



New York 


NEW YORK (AP) - The 
stock market rose Friday as 
news of a decline in unem 
ploymenl in the United States 
provided some encourage¬ 
ment to traders disheartened 
by rising interest rates and 
indications that the economy 
is cooling. 

Much of the day s attention 
focused on the volatile gam 


__ J2L 

15 Util. 16640 907.65 906 12 107.21 *6.55 
*5 Sfks 303.95 307.72 302.42 306.12 ♦ 1.99 

Stocks volumes: Indus 1,983,900; Trans 
1,603,900; Utils 393400; 65 Stfcs. 3.9B0,. 
100. Total volume 1S.07 million 


bling issues, which dropped 
sharply late in the session as 
rumors circulated that the 
New York Stock^'Exchange 
would make it harder to by 
the casino stocks on credit 

After the close, rumor be 
came reality as the NYSE 
and American Stock Ex¬ 
change boosted their down 
payment, requirements from 
50 to 7ft percent for credit 
purchases of several gaming 
issues. Ttfe NYSE said it was 
acting to assure the protec¬ 
tion of investors and the 
American exchange said its 
move was prompted by re¬ 
cent volatile price move¬ 
ments. 

Among Canadian issues on 
the New York Slock Ex¬ 
change, Dome Mines was up 
6»k lo S88'i', Campbell Red 
Lake l>i to $39 Massey 
Ferguson to $ll' : .Cana 
dian Pacific*Hi to * 20 '. and 
Alcgn 3 , tu.$31 V 


$i«ck 

Ramaoa in 

BaftyMM 
RorarGo 
Pan Am 
C6f$rWrkJ 
Webb De'E 
Ranco inc 
Holiday inn 
Harran* 
UAL Inc 
Colwm Piet 
D'Oita'Eo 
Freitona 
EasfnAiru 
Boa ng 


ACTIVE STOCKS 
Salat 


O'-iQt 

181200 

661700 

655400 


242300 

.424)0 

739560 


Clata Ch pa 

“ 114 - T , 
$7 -r , 
304 a! , 
I a ♦ '• 
03 -94 
30*, —3’i 
794 44 , 
24 1 , ♦ 4 
34 .4 -44 
42 *2', 

24 - 
S3 al's 
124-4 
144 4l 
73’. ^24 


Seagram was down 

4 t‘» 

S3i»*. 





QUOTATIONS 


Alcan 

3t>« 

inland St 

3* 4 

AlCPa 

45*: 

IBM 

Jfs 

AtdChem 

38-, 

mt werv 

43 . 

A' Chin 

3?», 

INCO 

16-. 

Am Air 

174* 

int Paper 

45^. 

Am Brnd 

5*4 

ITT 

32’, 

Am Beast 

* 

Johns-Man 

32-4 

Am Can 

41-4 

Kaiser AI 

35 

Am El P 

23 J , 

Kennecott 

24 4 

Am .vtolor 

Am Tel T 

6*. 

60-. 

Kraft co 

LTV 

46-* 

If. 

Ampe* 

\v* 

Litton 

26-* 

Asarce 

15’• 

Lm ind 


Ashland 

38' > 

McD Doug 

37*-. 

Alt Rich 

•5U* 

McLaen 

19-. 

AvCO 

32 7 , 

M«-ck 

61'-, 

Avon 

Bell Haw 

5T: 

22H 

Mar Lvn 
Minn MM 

•Tl’i . 
62'. 

Bendix 

40 't 

Mo Pac 

ms 

Beth St 

23 

Mobil 

66 

est. 

Borden 

T3'4 

32», 

29J. 

Monsanto 
Motorola 
NCR Corp 

** 

64 i 

Borg W 

32* 

Natomas 

4< 

Brunswk 

17' 4 

Newmont 

2B, 

Bud ind 

21 

Nort Sim 

19-, 

Burl Nor 

43 

Owen ill 

22'. 

r rrs M 
CMarp M 

15 

6ft’, 

Pec Gas 

Pan Am 

24». 

' 

CoJ Brasl 

■A* 

Pan El P 

43', 

Ceianesr 

41 J 4 

PeooG 

35 

Chile M 

33 J . 

PepsiCo 

31-H 

Chess* 

30 

Phil Ei 

: ir. 

Chrysler 

11 } , 

Phil Vor' 

71'. 

CieveE' 

19 , 

ptvi Pete 

32', 

Coca Cola 

41 , 

Pit Bone* 

26 

Col-Palm 

?l 

Polaroid 

53 1 , 

Comsat 

42 

Proc Gam 

I 7 ■ 

ConFrt 

31 e 

Pub Sv EG 

23-1 

Con Nat G 

40-, 

R£A 

32-. 

Cont Dai. 

41 

Repubbi 

74-. 

Con Ed 

73-4 

Revlon 

55*. 

Cont Oil 

71 , 

Rockwe' 

34 • 

Crown Ck 
Crown Zell 

34 

36-, 

Schiumoe-g 
Scott Pap 

8« . 

16 . 

Delta Air 

53 

Sea Cstie 

31 

Disney W 

43 • 

Seers 

23 * 

D'gifal E 

52 

Seatre.n 

•3 . 

DowChem 

V 3 

Shell 

34-. 

du Pont 

123‘, 

Smgex 

19 . 

East Air 

I4C. 

Sony 

So Cel E 

7 . 

East KOd 

63 . 

% 

El Paso 

17 ; a 

South Pec 

31', 

Exxon 

49 : , 

Soerrv 

46 

IfUSS 

37 

12 J * 

Stand Cel 
Sun Qil 

44 . 

44 . 

Ford 

444, 

Teiedvn* 

104 , 

GamSko 

35S 

Telex 

$ ■ 

Gen Dyn 

15 , 

Texaco 

24 • 

Gen Tire 

JB 7 , 

Tex Guif 

2ft J « 

Ga Pac 

31 

TWA 

28 

o item 
Goodyear 

31'i 
17'. 

UnCarb 
lin Pa< 

40 . 

53', 

Grevhocnd 

13-* 

Un Bro 


Gcif Oil 

24 1 , 

UnO • 

49 . 

H-lton 

51': 

UAL Inc 

42 

Homestake 

37 . 

U S Steel 

26 . 

Honeywell 

69 

West Air 

13 . 

Houston 

32** 

Westph*# 

22 , 


•OX SCORE 




Fr. 

Thur* 

issues fraoeo 

19C2 

1811 

Advances 

Declines 


K 

659 

836 

unchanged 


447 

386 


COLONY 

MOIO* ISS 

IORRY STEARNS 

AT THE PIANO BAR 
385*2441 6io 
COACHLIGHT KiX'Mjoo*) 


VANCOUVER ISLAND PROPERTIES 

Six rtvar trontaga lots to# sale on the Famous Cowichan Rrver 11 
miles west of Puncan each lot approximately 4 5 acres with 300 of 
river front — price $36,000 per lot 
Also ten 10-acre residential lots at Sooke close to Victoria and 
twenty-eight 5 to 15 acres recreational residential lots on Denman 
Island Price range $36,000 to $45 OOO 
tor information contact. 

Vanisl# Land Development Ltd. 

P.O. Box 10, Victoria, B C. 

Telephone: 388-7585 

$- 27 x 598-4865 evenings & weekends 


ANNUITIES 

Wr*cn ar« gue^a^teed for lit# p’ov.oe -'O'# 
»p#naao# nco n “# tnan otn«r forma o' 
v#sime r i. Tn#y ca* n*yt a minimum nu.mtwr 
Of payment* gu«'ant##o t cas# o' a 
D'ematur# oeam Tn# first $1,000 of tr* ta. 
aUe porron quaiif<#s for tn# pensionaoe 
oeduct on or :nt#reat oeouct-on tor no&a 
over age 6b Call, phon# or „Mte m# tor tr*e 
beat rate* aveiiaoi# 

H. J. F. ROSE 

EXECUTIVE CONEULTANT 

CANADA LIFE ASSURANCE CO. 

^•ue 3BS-14I4 1070 Dooglaa St. 4-1 Res 592-3759 A 



London 

LONDON (CP) - Closing *t 0 ck ouo 
tationa Fridav in new pence uniesa 
pound* are indicated, » indicate* that 
Quotation* include* dollar premium 
bated on latest conversion rate, 0 7066 
Associated Brit Foods72; Babcock and 
Wilcox 137; Bat* Charrington 162; 
BiCC 123’:, x$lyvoors477>:; BOC in¬ 
ternational 68 ; Soots 2214 ; Sowater 
1994; $rlt AmTomb3l5 \ Brit Asset* 
Trust 784. Brit FetroNum 87$; xBro- 
ken Hill Prop a*9 Buffett 813 1-16; 
Burmah Oil 87; xCanadian Pac stox 
14 «, xCharttr Cons 14?',; Cons Gold 
187 ,; Courtaulds 1154; Op $«gr$ 
4304; D.stillers 190; OuNpp 76; EMI 
1464; xF S GedukJ 25 3-16; Gen Elec 
30S4; Glaxo 6054; Grand Metroplitan 
Hotels lit'*; Gr Un Stores 304, Guest 
Keen 2794; Hawker Siddelev 238; 
Hoover 775; ICI 394 ";; imp Tab 104; 
Kloof 155; Marks and Spencer 84 ; 
Metal Box 362; Minorco 1904. xPhll- 
Ilps965; Pilkington Bros623",; Ple»vev 
102; Rank A 278; Rio Tinto Zinc 229':; 
Roan Consol 65; Set Trust 451; Second 
Scott Inv 1044; Shell T and T 5674; 
Tanganyika 168':; Thomson 255 
Thorn 360; Tuba Investmants 406; Ul 
tramar 7374; Unilewar 564; Union 
Curp 306; Vaals £21; Vickers 1944; 
western Oriefontein 33 r a; Western 
Deep Level 123-16; xWest Mines 101; W 
Hoidino 2$4»; Woolworth 65; Zambien 
Coooer 15' 4 . Bends: Brit Transport 
£64; Brit Cons 20 1 *; Treasury •’ ,924; 
War Loans 31V*. The Financial Times 
industrial index aMG, oft 0.5 


Alberta 

Complete tabulation 0 * Fr Idav trans- 
In cent* unless 


t 


OPPORTUNITY 




RESEARCH SUPERVISOR 

Alberta Recreation. Perks end Wl'Hife Edmonton require a 
seif starter who thrives m en etmosphere of responsibility 
supervision end ection. Plena.\co-Qrdlnatea and deieQaies 
assignments to a team of three professional specialists respon¬ 
sible for providing support services m the area of Social 
Bto-phyaical or Economic research for the department of 
Recreation. Parks and Wildlife 

Qualifications A Master • Degree tn Natural or Social Sciences 
tour years of proven environpiental research experience m the 
prescribed fields and supervisory expertise are -considered 

necessary 

Salary 121. V8?-$?7 960 

Competition Closing Data October ' 9’8 


Alber ta Government Employment Office 


10*10 Jasper Avenue 
Edmonton, Alberta TBJ 2W4 


1 jj 


Is from previous 

OsssChge 

6 ♦!$ 


Learn to 
Prepare 
Income Taxes 


• Accurate with figure*? 

• Like to meet the public? 

• Want to earn axtra money? 

Enroll in the MAR Block income Tax Courss beginning soon 
•n your araa and loam to prapara mcoma taxes for youraa'f. 
your friends and as a source of income 
Job* interviews available tor best students Send tor tree 
information and class schedules today 

| Classes begirt s«pt. 13 and will b« hold in two trot loca¬ 
tions 


Ua P 

I ■•Ml 


{ (Canada), LTD 


2 


contact the office nearest you* 

—1 tiov - 


IOOO 0OUOLAS iT^VBT 411 
_ TBLEPHONf 3$$-$$ 13 

Pleasa tend mt free information about your tax 
preparation court#. I understand there it no 
obligation 


LONDON (API-Closingootdprice* 
Fridav In U S. doUers en ounce. Lon¬ 
don- 20675, Paris- 20171: Frankfurt. 

207.50; Zurich- 208 375. Hoop Konp 
200 46 


Adore*, r 

CHy __ 
l Fhon# _ 


I CLIP AND MAIL TODAY| 
























































DAILY UULuMM. Victoria, B.C., Saturday. September 1 . l$ih 9 


Silver 


, Closing baa* price of I ODO ounce 
irertiftcaitti ki the Victoria area, *c 
' ordmo to tha Scoflabanfc. $5 52 U S 
bid por troy ounce and 15.57 asked 
Previous daw 15 46 and 15 57 


VICTORIA GLASS 

WINDOW 

RIPAIRS 

MMtll MMTtr. 


Closing prices of all traded aottam 
Sates unit is too shares (Trans-Canada 
out ions combine Montreal and Toronto 
exchange option trading) 

MBps Vii im Last Clew 

Abitfci Fab 115 DO 657 umu 
Abitibi Feb 117’: 65 §9 145 117 

Abitlbi Nov DO 5 37 17 117 

Abitibi Nov 115 5 III tr j 117 

Abitibi Nov 112’: 25 367 14^117 

Abitfei NOV Sirs » US IS 117 

A jean Feb 135 3 HO w vie 1 , 

Alcan May 135 4 ?i 15 1#'« 

A jean Nov 135 H 239 CS136 . 

Alcan Nov$27*a 2 79 11 13* . 

Asama Jan 115 6 350 16’ >$20 a « 

Asama Jan 120 13 513 13 


^V»7r Lid’s on major Abitibi deal 


PURCHASING 

Victoria area manufacturer requires a person for 
Purchasing Department Applicants should have 
a background in purchasing in a mechanical or 
related field Reply In writing, stating work and 
education background and salary requirements, 
to 


Victoria Press Box 7. 


93x 



Where Westerners win aH-ways 

Western Canada Lottery Foundation 


Jsnlir 
J*n 122’ 
Apr 120 
*sam« Oct 115 
Asams Oct 130 
Asama Oct 112': 
Asa m s Oct 117' 7 
Asama Oct 122't 
BCdn Nt Nov 112. 
Brscn A ftt> $15 
Sr sen A fab 117** 
Brscn A May 117'. 
Brscn A NovilS 
Brscn A Nov $17* j 

S Mtl Feb 125 
Mtl Feb 12? 

“ May 125 
Nov $19'. 
Nov 122 
Nov 1I7 1 7 
CP Ltd Fab 120 
CP Ltd Fab $22’: 
CP Ltd Novia 
CP Ltd NOV f17* j 
CP Ltd NOV 122’J 
Dom MJan 195 
Dorn MOctlTO 


22 312 15 $J0-« 

23 B 12 $50 » 
5 179 14 1120- - 

4 490 $5 3 « $20 j « 
1051531 82*4 $&i. 

12 362 11 $20-. 
17 577 &*!»>* 
19 116 125 tBIo 

1 I IS . IU 

jjs.fr.; 

14 69 160 $17 

AS P» 

9 230 135 123-4 

3 541 $2’e$2J 

2 109 185 123 - 

5 307 14* 

10 423 12’ 

10 20 25 

4 232 14 
113 481 

6 246 . 

8 II 16 
50 264 185 

2 3111 

5 - 


123-4 
123-4 
116 
$23 . 


13 123- 
$3 3 . 123** 


$23 3 e 

$23-. 

104’ 



Pate Jan 165 

Pete Jan 170 

Pete Jan $75 

Pate Jan $80 
_ Pel* Jan 115 

O Pete Apr $65 
D Pete Apr 170 
D Pete Oct 150 
O Pete Oct 155 
O Pete Oct loo 
D Pete Oct 165 
O Pete Oct $70 
Gull C Feb $30 
Gulf C Feb $27* 

Gulf C May $30 
Gulf C Nov 130 
Gulf C Nov 127 . 

HO OA Jan 140 
HO OA Jan 145 
Ho OA Oct $40 
HO OA Oct $45 
Husky Apr $45 

Husky Oct 145 

toil AFeb $20 
lOi! AFeb $17* 1 
(Oil AFeb 122’ J . 
lO.l a,\\ av $20 
lOil A Vav $22** 

IO I A Nov $20 
lOil ANov im* * 
(Oil ANOVfZTr 
MB Ltd swat. 
MB LM fab«2 j 
MB Ltd May 120 
MB Ltd Mays27*» 
MB Ltd Nov $?0 
MB Ltd NOV 817*2 
MB Ltd NOV $22’i 
Mas F fib $10 
Mas f Fab $15 
Mas F Feb $12’* 
Mas F May 112' * 
Mas F Nov $10 
Mas F Nov $15 
Mas F Nov $12* * 
INCO AFeb 120 
INCO af 5$17>* 
iNCO AF*$»'i 
INCO AMay$» 
INCO AMAy $17* * 
INCO ANov $20 
NorcnFeb 115 
NorcnFeb $17' * 
NorcnMav $15 
NorlnMav $17* * 
NorcnNov $15 
NorcnNOv $17' * 

Noran A Feb 135 
Noran A May 132’: 
Noran A Nov 135 


V 


Great Canadian Oil Sands 
Limited is Alberta's successful pioneer venture 
in the Athabasca Tar Sands 

With an average ddlly production of 50,000 
barrels, this progressive organization invites 
applications for the following in its Fort 
McMurray operation: 

HEAVY DUTY 
MECHANICS 

Must hold a permanent Alberta or Interprovincial 
Journeyman status. Candidates with the following 
experience will be considered for our present 
openings: 

ELECTRIC WHEEL DRIVE HAULAGE TRUCKS 
ALL CATERPILLAR EQUIPMENT 

Only qualified applicants will be considered 

G.C.O.S. offers: 

— Competitive salaries 

— Comprehensive benefits package 
— Relocation assistance 

— Unlimited opportunities for self develop¬ 
ment and advancement with a dynamic 
organization. 

Fort McMurray is: 

— a thriving, modern community of 22.000 
only 275 paved miles from Edmonton, 
offering: 

— excellent housing, medical, recreational 
and educational facilities 

Albertans enjoy: 

— no sales tax 

— lowest provincial income tax m Canada - 

— a solid economic future 

Apply in confidence to 

Mr. Ed Van Maanen 

Great Canadian Oil Sands Limited 

P O Box 4001 

Fort McMurray, Alberta T9H3E3 ,**» 


GREAT CANADIAN 
OIL SANDS LIMITED 

FIRST IN THE OIL SANDS 


Nor TejOct Vtt 


TNOct __ 

P Feb $35 

p Feb $40 

P Febi^' 

P May $35 
P May $40 
Nov $35 
P Nov 14 
Bt Jan 13$ 
fi Aorjp 
Rov Bk 0(1130 
Roy Bk Oct $35 
Shell C Feb $15 
Shell C Nov $15 
Shell C Nov $12’ i 
Shell C Nov $17'. 
Stlco ANov $27* * 
Total volume 4423 
Total open nterest 


Pae 

Pac 

Pac 

Pac 

Pac 

Pac 

Pac 

Rov 

Rov 


7127 W4 

1 22l20 i « I04 1 * 

5 219 3*.* US 

iieans 

12 §6119 195 
27 32116 $95 

13 1113 195 

2 4 125 $95 
154 T02824* * §95 

3 32 136 1*5 

2 #0 $39 $95 
46 150 124’4 195 
27 156 S22->4 $95 
170 301 f24*« 195 
29 45 17 : 136 . 

40 60 18-4 136-. 

4 1 $8 $*>. 

73 151 $6’: 136*4 

3 41 $4’. $36^ 

1 31 14**144 

2 63 $27,144 

20 7? $4*, $44 
36 191 140 $44 

I 14 14 141’, 

5 96 135 $41 * 
147*71 14’*122-4 
22 101 $7 $227. 

234 SIS 12 $22 ; * 
IS 92 $5 $22 : , 
88 163 13* - $??'* 
:60I40* $3': $22 * 
56 195 16*4122-, 

*7 248 mS 

II II S3*-2123 

21 41 13**5B 

26 512 13 7 . 123 
1 214 $^.$23 

6 147 lR 123 

7 4 13*4 $13 

19 213 73 11J 

41 224 12 $13 

14 25 !2 : j $13 

15 lit $3U $U 

3 151 31 $13 
46 335 140 $h 

» 753 160 $18 , 

1 IK $27, $18-4 

5 171 75 111 3 , 

4 48 190 $18-4 

2 46 tt 111-, 
17 683 65 111 3 . 
60 694 $3»« 117* 2 
1091952 185 $17* j 
24 64 14* j $17* 2 
51211 12«.117'* 
691131 13 |17>* 

7413632 95 tlT* 
1 80 12*. 132’. 
1 7 14*. 132 i 

1 97 125 132*6 

6 61 12’'1136 , 

2 23 $4 $j6. 

7 67 ISA. MO-. 

15 131 $4 i $40*« 
6 10 19 $40*4 

6 11 17': $40-« 

9 10 $4*, $40 , 

3 141 tt 140-4 
S3 601 $2>. $40-4 

10 331 $2*i $33 ; 4 
6 111 1^4133-4 

60 269 14 133-« 
10 162 15 $33 J . 

m in 

1 3 12*4115 
14 395 25 $15 

5 267 SO 125 t 


TORONTO (CPV— A mys¬ 
tery buyer has purchased 
600.000 shares, worth nearly 
$25 million, to acquire a 10 
per cent interest in Abitibi 
Paper Co. Ltd of Toronto 
Speculation Is that the 
block purchase is a prelude to 
a takeover of the forest prod¬ 
ucts giant. Among the com 
panics mentioned as possible 
candidates to gain control are 
Price Co. Ltd of Quebec (Abi 
tibl’s subsidiary) and Power 
Corp of Canada Ltd of Mon 
treat. 

Mutual 

funds 

TORONTO (CP)—Recant prices of 
investment funds supplied by The us 
vesjmant Funds Institute of Canada 
Friday. They are the net asset value 
per share or unit (NAVPS) last circu¬ 
lated by the fund In accordance with its 
ondng practice as contained in the 
Droapectus of the fund, n—no sales 
charge, x — U.S. Fund, y — delayed 
NAVPS, xd-ex dividend. 

Universal Group 

Equity >7.2? 


Meanwhile, the buyer who 
paid $17 a share Thursday 
was not identified by Thom 
son. Kernaghan and Co. Ltd., 
a Toronto brokerage firm 
which acted as an interme¬ 
diary in the deal * 

However. Thomson. Ker 
naghan said the buyer in¬ 
tended to hold the stock for 
investihent purposes only. An 
Abitibi spokesman said it 
could not explain the sudden 
activity in its shares but 
added that no one sharehold 


AGF Group 
Amor Grwth 5.97 
Cdn Gs Epy 21.19 
can See Gth 6 9) 
Cdn Trustaed 4 64 
Corp Invtst <" 
Corn tnv Stk 7 
>wfh Equity Y 
Japan 1, 
n Money Mkt 10 00 


Resource 


Inv 6.7i 
“ 4.55 


art 


iai 


vG . dend 
vNorthn Eo 
vRevenueG 
v4066 


51 

Grp 

7.27 

7.64 
4 75 
14.44 
497 


niAjWC .... 

c«To, 

Goldfund 304 

GoWirint 3.1 > 

Canapci Gr 

vBond 9.57! 
Fund 12.0? 

mtematni 
* Voripdoe 
xdCapifil Gth 
xChase 


JOBLESS 
AT 5.9% 

IN U.S. 

WASHINGTON (AP) - 
Unemployment in the United 
States declined to 5 J per cent 
in August, the second time it 
has dipped below 6 per cent 
this year, as more women 
and teen-agers found jobs, 
the U.S. labor department re¬ 
ported Friday 


er—until now—held more 
than five per cent of company 
stock 

Some financial observers 
say the transaction i$ reimin 
iscenl of one that occurred 
five years ago when Acres 
Ltd. of Toronto bought a mi 
nority interest in Great Lakes 
Power Corp. Ltd. 

Acres later sold the block to 
Brascan Ltd., which Brascan 
used to build its subsequent 
ownership of Great Lakes. 

Abitibi has about 18.5 mil¬ 
lion shares outstanding 

A dominant shareholder is 
Investors Group of Winnipeg 
which holds about on<» million 
»hares of Abitibi. Investors is 
a subsidiary of Power Corp. 
which has an interest in Con¬ 
solidated Bathurst Ltd of 
Montreal, q pulp and paper 
company 

One theory is that the bu>er 
wants the shares so (hey will 
be available to some other 
company interested in gain 
ing control of Abitibi 

Thomson, Kernaghan said 
the buyer was a Canadian 
and had no other forest prod¬ 
ucts interest. 


Speculation about a pos¬ 
sible takeover was fanned 
Wednesday when a block of 
500.000 Abitibi shares was 
traded on the Vancouver 
Stock Exchange at,$17. 


POLON 

MOTOR INN 

THE SIDE DOOR 

18 OPEN AND 
THE GIRLS ARE BACK 


)Ck8 




r O PRIME55 


• 1 Year Savmqs Certificates 

• Withdrawable at 9% 

ill W6STCOAST SAVINGS 

w9 CR€DIT UNION 


CO* Cumul 8 21 
inf«rn4tnl 9 00 
P'd Rtsourc 5 7? 
Taurub 9.75 

Calvin BuNack Gr 

Acrofund 158 
Banw Fund 5 48 
CIF 41* 


VIM 

10$ 

h 13.17 

_ 6.13 

ynComCp Mfq 10.15 
Datjardim Gr 
yCanadian 
vMvpotfiea 
vinferndH 


Igatns 


!S 

9 19 


vlntl Energv 2.97 
vlntl Growth 5 22 
vintl Income 383 
vNat Res Gth 4.79 
vUnlvest 652 

y Growth 7.99 

Com Inv Graup 
vnco-ooeri 11.42 
vnLdmfc GF 1118 


46202 


Grain 


WINNIPEG 

''Ouotaf ons n metric tons 

Open Hifh Law Clove Thu 

Flax 

Oct 

Dec 246 10 246.51 246.80 246 06 246.1* 
Rapevead Vancouver 


.46 50 247.80 246.50 246.70 
—-- 247.10 


WM 


Sec 
NOV 
Jan 
Bariev 
Oct 
Dec 
Mar 
Oatc 


gU 7171 7170 


789 ?0 289.60 219.00 211 tt 219 20 

273Jl 274.50 273 10 273 80 273.30 
273.00 273.80 272.10 273.50 273.88 

70 20 70.40 69 50 69 70 7B.20 

n.78 n.|| 71.48 71.40 71.50 

72.00 >2.00 71.58 71 50 71 90 

71.78 71 70 71.00 71.80 71 50 

- 71.00 71.40 

70 50 - - 70 50 71 M 


OCf 93 30 94 00 93 00 93.20 93 30 

Oec 90.00 90.00 19 00 89 28 89 40 

Mar — — — 87.50 87.40 

Oct 90 60 90 60 90 00 90 40 90.60 

Nov — - - 91 40 91 50 

OK 90.40 90.40 90 00 90 00 90 40 

CHICAGO 

Open High Lew date Ctrpe 


E 

Cam 

Sao 

Dec 

Mar 

Oati 

K 

Mar 


3.36 3 40 
3 29-4 3.35 
3 26 3.30 


3.34-4 3 39 J , ♦ 04 « 
3.29 , 3.33-4 *.02 4 
3.2* 3.29-4 ♦.82-4 


Dolphin Eoty 379 
vDolphin Inc 5.14 
Cundill Vatu* 6.21 
Ealawtav Grouo 
Commwfh 19.14 
Growth 1263 
income 4 61 
mtematni 13 26 
Laveraqe 5.91 
Venture 6.31 
Viking 593 
Guaranty Trait Gr 
ynlnv Eouity 8 2S 
yntnv Income 4 ?6 
vnMortgaoe HI.IS 
Guardian Group 
Entproriie 1.06 

sit fiats 

Gwth Fund 14.01 
North Amer 5.61 
Mutual Acv 6.59 
Mutual me 5 43 
Sec income 9 49 
World Equity 7.66 
Investors Group 
vO'vidand ^ 7 42 
growth 1160 
vmternatni 7 42 
v Jdoen 14.93 

v Mortgage 5.01 

v Mutual 5.75 

yProvidt Stk 5.93 
yRetiramnt 645 
Ptwwci Invasi Or 
Coe Cumul 1 8 21 

? id Rasourc 5 72 
auras 9.75 

Frat at Revenu Gr 
yAmericm 12 36 
vCanadien 7.28 
v Foods H 506 
vReirate 7 67 
Principal Gr 
Collective 9.66 
Growth 5 91 
venture 5.45 
Prudential Gr 
Growth *70 
Income 5 34 
Savings Invest Gr 
vAmercan 17.36 
yCanadian 7.28 
vH Fund 5.06 
vRetiremnt 7.67 
Scotutwtf Of 
Scotlafund 105 
ScottaM Mto 103 
United Band Share 
vRoyFund 
vRovFnd me 511 


519 
4.28 I 
nySooc 6.97 

Dixon Krog Gr 

Dixon, krog 116 
Heritaoe 2 5? 
Vanguard 8.18 
Dreyfus Group 
vine 1351 

yxlnfernatt 17.85 
vnDvnamic 10.96 
vOornin Comp 9 04 
nExecutv Can 7.58 
nExacctv Inti 1.63 
xFid Trend 26 73 
nFst Cn Mtg IP 38 
Fijcorl Fund 6(77 
nHarvard 9.97 
Industrial Gr 
indust Amer 3.27 
indust Div 648 

induat Eq 
mdust Gth 
indust Incm . 
indust Pens 34 05 
vn iones Hewrd 5.30 
Keystone Gr 
Us K-2 5 52 

Cut S I 18.» 
Cus S 4 • 5.78 

Polar is 3 73 
xLex Rsrch 16.54 
xManhatn 2.92 
yMaritime Eq 2.74 


Stock fraud 
charges laid 
against nine 


CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS 

Chartered Accountants practicing in association 
have office space available in a new building in the 
downtown area. Chartered Accountants wishing to 
join this association on a cost sharing basis please 
contact 

J. D. A. HULKO, C.A. or 
W. J. SCHIBLI, C.A. 

595-3721 


CALGARY (CP) — Stock 

fraud charges were laid 
Thursday against nine per 
sons associated with a West 
cm Canadian brokerage 
house. 

The charges stem from a 
year-long RCMP investiga¬ 
tion into the activities of 
Bondstreet International Se 
curities Ltd. and the trading 
of shares in a mining stock. 
Thor Exploration Ltd. 

CpI. Bob Mainwaring of the 
city police force said the 
value of Thor shares rose to 
13-25 on Nov. 24. 1977. from 
MrS?o 0 *' 14 tt 11-80 on Nov*. 1. 1977. 
|$ A J r 2L0 T ,ow On Nov. 21. RCMP raided 


tm 

tt 

1 10 83 


5.29 


vCanadiaa 
vEoultv 1006 
xOna Mm St 15.89 
xOppanhmr 6 76 

Pemtertop Gr 
vnPacific D>v 6.66 
vnPactfic Ret 5 62 
vnPacitic US 5 64 
PHN Group 
vBond 1* 

vCanaflian lu 

vDiv income 10 

yFund 21.5a 
v Pooled 34.54 
nyRRSP 1549 

M^ndQfnnt 

nPenvonMul 59 
rtXanaou Fd 5.78 
nPutnani 11.69 
Starling Group 
Eouty 6.90 
v Mortgage S.l? 
xTech 9.37 

Temote Gth 19 7$ 
yTride* 1412 
Trans Cana** Gr 
A 5 81 

B 58 90 

C 1147 

Spec a 1 4 50 

United Group 
vAccumula 4.37 
yAccumul R 5.13 
vAmertcan 1.92 
yCont Morto 3 IB 
vHOruon 3 31 
vSecurity 4.71 
vVenture 3.41 
vVenture Ret 5.32 
v Western Gth 5.91 


the offices of Bondstreet in 
Edmonton. Calgary and the 


; 2.14 4 2.13 My, - 00’ 
2.22-4121* *2 22’* ♦ «> . 
2 32 2J0* -. 2.32 ♦.« . 


IS., 

142 


1.23’j < 
1.35’; 1 

1.43 


lOKimil 



Seo 

A S4 

6.S8 3 .6.52 6 56 

♦ 00 

NOv 

6.48 

6.45 6 38 6 44. 

( ♦.84 

Jan 

6.45 

6.51 4.44’ 1 6 50 

♦ 03 

Soybean Oil 


Seo 


26 7 4 26 20 26 60 

- 40 

Oci 


25 55 24.95 25.40 

♦ 44 

Dec 


P5 24 42 

♦ 60 

Soybean Meal 


Sec 


16R 70 167 80 168.30 

-.90 

Oci 


169 70 168 80 169 60 

-60 

Dec 


17V60 170.31 171 9 

♦ to 


Metals 

LONDON (AP) — Closmo metals 
Fridav inpounds sterling a metric ton. 
silver m pence a troy ounce 
Copper spot 741-7*2; coooer future 
755-755.50. 

Tin spot 6,935-6.940. tm future 6,145 
6.850 

Lead soot 343-344; lead future 348.5 

349 

Zinc spot 321 25 321 75. 4inc future 
328.75-329 

Silver^oot 285 5 285 7, silver future 
. 297 3 29? 4 


Chrysler 
U.K. hit 
by strike 

LONDON (Reuter) ~ 
Workers at two Chrysler 
plants in Britain went on 
strike Friday night over pa\ 
demands, shuttfng down as¬ 
sembly lines for trucks, vans 
and parts 

The strike by the 2.500 
workers at' plants in Dunst¬ 
able and Luton, about (M kilo¬ 
metres northwest of London, 
came a day after the French 
firm Peugeot-Citroen an 
nounced detailed plans for 
taking over Chrysler’s Euro¬ 
pean operations. 

Chrysler rejected the work¬ 
ers’ demands, saying that to 
meet them would mean 
breaking the British govern¬ 
ment’s anti-inflation pay 
guidelines 


head office in Vancouver and 
seized company records 

Charged with stock ma¬ 
nipulation are Ann Mark of^ 
Vancouver, chairman of the" 
board of Bondstreet. Leslie 
Michael Hart of Vancomor, 
president and trading direc¬ 
tor. and Joseph John Cus- 
tock, Jr. of Calgary , former 
Alberta district manager. 

Facing charges of conspir¬ 
acy. allegedly to affect the 
public market price of Thor 
shares, are Mark. Hart. Cus- 
tock and six Bondstreet Al¬ 
berta salesmen. They are 
Brian Daryl Lakevold and 
Hector Norman Pegoraro. 
both of Edmonton, and Bruce 
Ian MacDonald. Kenneth 
Greenwood. Bernard Green¬ 
field and Melvin Nathan 
Cash, all of Calgary 

They are to appear in court 
in Calgary Sept. 25. 

CpI. Mainwaring would not 
disclose how much money 
wasinvoUed. 

Bondstreet is the sponsor 
and principal trader of Thor, 
a company with uranium 
holdings and other interests 
in northern Saskatchewan. * 


SCHOOL DISTRICT No. 63 

(SAANICH) 

DO YOU NEED A HOUSE OR COTTAGE? 

School District No 63 (Saanich), through its Secondary School 
Construction classes, makes available at cost residential 
houses (or other structures) 

Projects need to conform to certain limitations due to time, 
class sizes and Ministry of Highways transportation regula¬ 
tion* • 

We art looking particularly tor^omeone who desires a house of 

approximately 700 to 1.150 r-*“* 

tf you are interested. 

contact 


or. wish further information, please 


Mr R S Ingram, Secretary-Treasurer. 
School District No. 63 (Saanich). 

P O Box 2010. Sidney. B C V8L 3S4 
Telephone 656-1111 


Government of Canada 

DENTAL HYGIENIST 

Veterans Affairs Canada 

This competition is open to both men and women who are 
residents of British Columbia. Yukon Alberta. Manitoba and 

Saskatchewan 

SALARY: Up to $13jB75. per annum (Under Negotiation 
A Dental Hygienist is required for a Hospital dental clinic lor 
the Department of Veteran • Affairs 
QUALIFICATIONS: Graduation from a school ot Dental 
Hygiene acceptable to the College ot Dental Surgeons or 
eligibility tor registration as a Dental Hygienist in B C 
Knowledge of English is essential 

For further information contact Dr L W Irons at 666 - 681 9 
in Vancouver 

Send your application form and -or resume, quoting Refer 
ence Number 7&-V-OVA-72. before September 15. 1978 to 
L Grauer. Regional Staffing Officer. Public Service Com¬ 
mission. P.O. Box 11120. Royal Centre. 500-1055 West 
Georgia Street. Vancouver. B C V6E 3L4 


INVESTMENT FUND 
BROKER 

LOOKING TON A CAREER 
WHERE . . . 

— Ag# is OO Uarriar 

— Your taming* are 
unlimited 

— Your time it your own 

— The (oD 1* interesting 
and challenging . 

Then 1 would like to talk to you. 
Thu pot it io^ it in fh# invest- 
m#nf Hid dtlmg with mvtt- 
mtntz auch Bt 

TEMPLETON GROWTH 
BB2*. net gain amot Jan. 64 
INDUSTRIAL GROWTH 
394S **l gsr wnca Dec 3 4 sl '07 
For confidential interview 
call 383-4178 
Out of town inquiries writ# 
GREAT PACIFIC MANAGEMENT 
808 MllsiA Ah Vicuna I C 

V8T 120 * 8-20 


Earnings 

Alliance Building Carp. Ltd. six 
months ended June 30 1978. $404,374, 
lov>. no share figures, 1977. $560,10*. 

Biltmer* Industries Ltd., six months 
ended June JO 1971. $12,541, no shar* 
figor*. 1977. $8,488 
Bomac Batten LM., six months 
ended June 30: 197T, $63 268. five cents 
e sharer W77, si)4,312.22 cents 
Dickenson Mines Ltd., six months 
ended June 30: i97t.S610.000, ll.6cents 
a share. 1977, $469,000, 14 cants * 
Firsf City Financial Carp. Ltd„ six 
months ended June 30: 1971. si.906.000. 

Gasce DrstrlButmg LM., nine month* 
' ' iune30: 1971, $60,200. six cwrts a 
1977, I- 


Local Businessman in¬ 
terested in Partnership, 
Active. Semi-Active. $50.- 
OOO-S75.OQO available 
Reply to Victoria Press 
Box 893. 



Oriental Garpete 8 Handicrafts bfcd. 


(SELF WEAVER and DIRECT IMPORTER) 

Announces 


uuftr.tx 


SALE S EXHIBITION m 

OF HISTORICAL AND WORLD'S MOST CLASSICAL NEW 
SEMI-ANTIQUE AND ANTIQUE 

PERSIAN RUGS 

AVAILABLE IN EXTREMELY FINE MUSEUM QUALITY 
SIZES: 2’ x 3' to •’ K 12’ 

UP TO 50% OFF — 2 DAYS ONLY 

SEPT. 2nd SATURDAY and'SEPT. 3rd SUNDAY 
' 10 A.M. to 10 P.M. , 

THE EMPRESS HOTEL - GEORGIAN ROOMs 


share; 1977 $360,000, loss, ne shar* 

i made* Ltd., three months ended 
Junes 7 1978, $11,189,000. $130* share; 
1977. $8,004,000. 82 cents 
Kam Kofta Mines Ltd , six months 
ended June 30: 1978, $38,000,01 cents a 
share: 1977, $180,000. four cents 
Montreal City and District Savines 
Sank, nine months ended July 31: 1978. 
$6,714,000, $3 08 a share. 1977, $6,652 - 
000. $3 33. 


NEW OFFICE 
SPACE FOR LEASE 

Board of Trad# Building 

“ ‘ * (Addition) 

Bastion Squars 

(Victoria) 

Contact 385-6111 For Information 

MIDWEST PROPERTY MANAGEMENT 

3400 Edmonton Houto, P.O. Box 3190. Edmonton. Alberta (403) 420-9999 


a. 




CANADIAN IMPERIAL 

BANK OF COMMERCE 

WE'RE MOVING! 


Tuesday* September 5th/ 1978/ well be open for business 
as usual In our beautiful new office at 1964 Fort Street. That's 
right across the street from our former location so you won't 
have any trouble finding us. The location is new but the friendly 
service you expect from the Commerce is just the same. 


Wednesday/ September 6th/ 1978/ we re having an ’Open 
Bank" to officially open our new premises. Alderman John 
Goult will cut a ribbon at 10:30 a.m. and we would like all our 
friends to loin us tor the Ceremony. Light refreshments will be 
served from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and my friendly staff and t hope 
you will come in and have a cup of coffee with us. Well be 
looking for you. 


BANKING HOURS 

Monday to Thursday 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. 
Friday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. 



O. W. C. "Dave" Bulinckx 
Manager 

Fort and Foul Bay Road 
Victoria * 


I 

































































1 0 DA1L\ COLONIST. Victoria. B C , Saturday September 2, 187* 




WA 


8275 LOCHSIDE DRIVE itmtiWiMtMii 
OPEN FRI. and SAT. 2-5 P.M. 

MLS 39607. $119.900. Gat back to nature the momaot you antaf 
tttfg wooded property which provides bolt) privacy and quwtnaae 
Tbkl comptataty renovated home has IMng, dtnlno. kBcftan, 
laundry and bathroom oa mam floor and two bedrooms. Two 
. mora badrooms upstairs tra raaahad by a lovely spiral stamcaaa 
Moat rooma have viawa of tha ocean > 

MICHAEL W. NEWMAN Rm. 662-4105 


WARREN 


But. 477-7291 
(anytime) 


DF 


UFA REAL ESTATE LT 


Salmon clearance—for big spenders only 


VANCOUVER (CP) — 
More than one million pounds 
qf excess salmon will be sold 


to the public at hatcheries 
throughout British Columbia, 
but the fish will be sold only 



Just a Clarice and you' know 
it’s a community , 
where people care ... 

BRoaDmeao 

OFFERS SECLUDED COU NTRY LIVING 
JUST TEN MINUTES FROM CITY CENTRE 
WIDE FRONTAGE, 1/3-ACRE HOMISI1ES 
PRICED FROM $31,500 to $40,000.' 

Take the first step 
to better living! 


CAU US AT fcSg-5291 
MONDAY TO FRIDAY 8:30-5:08 
95# ROYAL OAK DRIVE 


c- . NEW / / 

cZjx&xMe&'ed <£±/en0i 

CEDAR SHORES 

AT 

JAMES ISLAND RD. & LOCKSIDE DRIVE 
BY THE SHORES OF SAANICHTON DAY 

A country ,lmo,ph.rt It iwWv lo downtown VklOfU. 

ter" — 



lust $64,900 for this 1,138 sq. ft. 3 bedroom home. Only a 
few Mops to the main living area, a full basement with 
grade level access to very large back lot. 



$66,500 — Could be 4-5 bedroofm. The main floor has 3 
barrooms, bath and one half. Large kitchen with nook 
area opening onto semi-covered sundeck The full 
davright basement has room to develop 2 bedrooms, rec 
room, bath is roughed-in, laundry and workshop area. 
Grade level entry from side lot. 



STARTER OR RETIREMENT HOME 

Lovely 2-bedfoom with large renovated kitchen. 
Separate dining room New fireptece in specioue living 
room. New roof. Large *ot Full basement. Priced to sail 
Aeking $54,000. Loaded with extras Drive by 846 Wol¬ 
laston end cell u* anytime. 

mark Mackenzie al matteo 

595-4596 659-5057 

ROYAL TRUST « 


to those who can afford to buy 
as much as S0.Q08 pounds at 
one time. 

Sig Weber, regional dim 


tor of Crown Assets Disposal 
Corp., said Thursday that ail 
the salmon arriving at the 
hatcherte* in one day must be 


W*rr4fcr« ouatity ana iaew r* 

reside •!<* am demand 

OPEN DAILY 
10 to 5 


WOOOSTOME PLACE 

1039 LINDEN 

(Between Rockland arKl Fort) 

2-6EDROOM 
from $47,500 

WE TAKE TRADES 

JIM WEST 


sold within 12 hours because 
the corporation does not have 
the manpower or the time‘to 
sell it on a smaller scale. 

The salmon will sell for $1 a 
pound, beginning on or 
around Sept 15. 

The federal fisheries de 
partment will put more than 
700.000 pounds of live Coho 
and Chinook up for public 
tender at the Capiiano sal¬ 
mon hatchery In North Van¬ 


couver. the Quinsam Riser 
salmon hatchery in Campbell 
River and at the Robertson 
Creek salmon hatchery in 
Port Albemj 

Weber said such excess 
quantities of salmon have 
never existed in previous 
seasons and the surplus is 
due to the fact that the num 
ber of salmon flngerlihgs 
being released by hatcheries 
is increasing 


OPEN HOUSE 


APPOINTMENT 

At The Permanent 

Mr Larry Brooks Managar of mo 
Permanent Reel Estate w pteesed to 
announce that HARVEY N MERRITT 
has itxned tha tales staff of the 
Shtflbourne Branch Harvey has 
spent me laet 10 years m the news¬ 
paper t*eXJ specializing m real aetata 
advertising For prompt, enthusiastic 
and effective handling of your 
property, whether buying or selling, 
call HARVEY NOW* 

477-0141 (Off.) 
477-4884 (Rm.) 


OFFICEIMCI MONTH DOWLAS 

(Across from Woodwards) 1.80 par sq. ft 

This is s torrrific opportunity'lor snyons not requir¬ 
ing drivs by exposure For furthsr information and 
viowing: 

81 - 

JOHN F. COLWELL 

502-9828 308-8454 


SATURDAY 1-4:30 P.M. 

938 KENTWOOD TERR. 

BFST OF BROADMEAD CAN BE YOUR^ 
OUR *00 SQ FT LOADED WITH FEATURES 
M I S. $154,900 00 

MURRAY LAWSON 38*4275 PAGER 2471 or 
PARK PACIFIC INVESTMENTS 383-4124 




OPEN HOUSES 


OPEN USE-SIT, SUL ML U 

1601 ROCKLAND AVE, 

You must see the inside of this beauti¬ 
ful home 

3 Large Bedrooms — 2 up/1 down 
Large 16 x25’ Living room 
2 Lovely — roomy bathrooms 
Panoramic views 
Large finished rec room 
Laundry room/Storage room 
Double carport 

Fully fenced — beautifully treed lot 

OFFERS TO $ 119,000.00 . 

BY OWNER 

598-5904 or 385-1401,, 


Arran House 545 Rlthet St. 

Luxury Condominium Units 

OPEN HOUSE 

IMriiT • l iwJiy MiM 

' ONLY 1 2-Bedroom Available 

• Rumpus Room with fireplace & pool table _ r „ 

• Swirl pod & sauna 

• i -Mock from shopping & Dalits Ftoad 

hem 388-9253 or 
km Mingo it 383-2425 


6936 EAST SAANICH ROAD 

Immaculate family home Enjoy tha atmosphere of 
mg, gardening and fruit trees. This high view home 
carport and dock for outdoor living. Over 1400 feat c* 
includes master ensuitt plumbing Lovely views 
area, separata din‘ng room and kitchen upholstered 
super large rec room with wet bar. plus a large di 
room and extra 3-pce bath down, in 10 milt circle 
Asking 04 900 To view call. 

344-2111 MOV KAISER 


Sat. Alt. 

country llv I 
with doubt# I 
n main floor I 
from living I 
nook Great I 
H) or family | 
MLS 35442 I 

477-44131 


7616 DLACKTHORNE ish.ichi..) Sit. 1 30-4 30 

At 159 , 900 , this 2 , /a year young home is one of tha bast values on 
the market today Tastefully appointed and Welly immaculate, 
this warm family home features L-sheped living-dining room, 
bright kitchen with family sized eating area, 3 bedrooms on 
main with master ensuitt The basement is ready to be 
developed to suit your naeds and tastes. All this is situeW* on a 
vary quiet cul-de-sac and yet quite close to the village Definitely 
priced to sail MLS. Your host 

386-2111 f GARY RESTELL 478-6M7 | 



An Address You Will Be Proud of 
At a Price You can Afford 

TOD HOUSE 

In Oak Bay 

2323 HAMIOTA 


proportioned suites all with 2 complete bathroom# i 
internal fully equtppad laundries Firapiacas Saa. ato 
and recreation within easy walking distance 

PRICES FROM $65,000 

OPEN TUES.-SAT. 1:30 TO 4:00 

H. Blake in Attendance 
Call 593-3321 



JACK MEARS 
OAK BAY REALTY LTD. 


ROYAL 
TRUST 

3400 Douglas St. 384-8001 
4082 Shslbourns St. 477-0191 

OPEN HOUSES 



This is what Cedar Shores is all about. Set on a large lot 
(108' x 100') amongst mature cedar trees, shake roof, full 
cedar siding. The sundeck is the full length of the house at 
the rear plus the dining room end facing the sea. Post and 
beam with natural cedar ceilings in main living area. 
Finished rec room. $89,900. 

COME AND VISIT US — WE ARE OPEN 

14 P.M. DAILY 

W tuba-wid. 

or CALL HANKY ATKIY 598-1737 ever 


weeded / doMPd 


3858211 19 CADU.AC 


O ver half of the luxury apartment homes at 
The Newport Beach have already been told 
Discerning buyer* with an eye for real quality and 
craftsmanship have been impressed with the very 
large lavishly appointed suites, and all the 
thoughtful finishing touches Park Pacific has 
built into this remarkable development. 

Overlooking Oak Bay waters.and the Marina— 
one of Victoria’s moet exclusive locations. 

Priced from $110.000. 

Look for ths classic blue canopy at 1375 Newport 

Av enue - 

For appointment to view, please call 596-4224 
(between 12:00 and 8:00 p.m.) or 383-4124. 

ClevtfpgiiJJeaeh 

CAnother quality development 
from Park Pacific 


1666 6R0USS0M 
$86. SB* ROR £|944Q p g 

$76,600 

Attractive 2 -Storey home m very desir¬ 
able area of Gordon Head 3 Bedrooms 
2 v beths temtty rot 


477-01 ft 


9640 DONCAST1R DRIVI 

6AT. 2:00-4:00 PM. $ 106,000 

Ties dekghtfut family home with four bedrooms and outstanding water and 
mountain views Must be sold Check out Vie veiue end mske an ottei the 
owner can t refuse 

477-0191 LIS AO AIM-WILLIAMS 899-9990 

477-0191 MUHTL1V WRIGHT 477-0997 


4066 6AWNVIMW CVIBS. 
(off ROORLOW) > 

UT. mi $86. 1*98-491 PJL 
671,600. 

Newly offered 1 * year old home in 
sppeakng new Gordon Head aubdtvi- 
yon. Hat 3 b edroo ms. 2 baths tuM 
beaemant with Bntahed rec room, ate. 
Wet priced al 17 f. 600 

JOHN LUND 477*6161 


$60 STANNARD AVI. 

SAT. and SUN. ItOO to 4:00 PM. 

Immecutate Faiftietd 2-bedroom plus basement hoi 
or starter. Terrific gardening aoM 

477-0191 HOHTLRV WVtlQKT 

477-Of$1 U 


ROYAL TRUST 



m 


371 FARVIEW RD. 

(OFF METCHOSIN RO. COL WOOD) 

SATURDAY 14 PJI. 

SUNDAY 14 P.M. 

OPEN HOUSE Vendor is anxious to sell this spacious 3 
bedroom home immediately Quality carpetinQ. lavish 
bathroom fixtures, huge kitchen, two fireplaces, rec 
room, dnve-tn garage Good sized lot. Extra badrooms 
Shake roof plus much more. Asking $62,500. 

RESIDENCE FRE9 OFFICE 

4774291 OIELEIMN 477-1141 

SLOCK BROS. REALTY LTD. 


♦ 2x 


OAK BAY 
OPEN HOUSE 

FRIDAY l SATURDAY 1:3*440 p.m. 

1580 W1LM0T PLACE 

Close to Oak Bay Village, an immaculate two storey 
family home located on a no through street — 
walking distance to aH school levels and recreation. 
House consists of three bedrooms and den. large 
living and dining rooms, very large modem kitchen 
including dishwasher and plumbed for washer and 
dryer Wall to wall carpet throughout — excellent 
decorative order. An average sized lot with out¬ 
standing landscaping, illuminated gardens, large 
sheltered patio and heated greenhouse An outstand¬ 
ing property in an excellent location 

592-2407 ART BEDFORD 592-2090 
MAROETTS A COWER 
OAK BAY PROPERTIES LTD. 

♦ 2x 


ATTENTION REALTORS 

loin a Successful Real Estate Office 

Montreal Trust has spactvfok. active licensed salespeople I 
who enioy working in a friendly, (<> operative and [ 
air-conditioned office 

Our benefits are designed lo 
assist you in being successful 
it National Referrals 
it Home Relocations — over bO 
companies represented 

★ Assisted iridge Financing 
it 1st and 2nd Mortgages 
it Proc Fees 

★ Management Assistance — not competition 

★ Guaranteed Trade Flan *•* 

Personal Benefits 

Ik Pension Plan 

it Sickness and Accident Benefits 
'♦ Group Life 

it Staff Mortgages »- 

let's get together — 

it can be mutually beneficial! | 

We Don't Want the Biggest Office 

— fust the Best! 


RON MacDONALD 

386-2111 (But.) 477-8956 (Ret.) | 

Anytime 

MONTREAL TRUST 

♦ 2 » 1086 Fort Street 


l 







































































































'I 


DAILN luLoMM, V ictum, B.L., Saturday. bcptemter J. 19J8 1 I 


Hornets expecting tougher test on Sunday 


* Saanich Hornois arc ex¬ 
pecting things to be Rougher 
m their second game of the 
season In the Vancouver Is¬ 
land Juvenile Football 
League. 

The defending champions 
host Cowlchan Timbermen 2 


p.m. Sunday at Royal Ath¬ 
letic Park in the only juvenile 
game of the weekend. 

The Hornets trampled Oak 
Bay Farmer Construction 48 
0 in the league opener last 
weekend but assistant coach 
Frank Hlndle doesn't expect 


that kind of runaway with the 
highly-regarded Timbermen 

Saanich downed Cowichan 
32-20 in a pre-season game 
and Hindle says the actual 
play was closer than the 
score indicated. 

"Both clubs have strong 
defenses and they have ex¬ 
cellent power runners in 


Wade Miller and Tom Neil 
son,'* said Hindle Friday. 

Saanich is led by auarter 
back Greg Frame and explo 
sive runner Guy Prevost 

Hindle says he also expects 
Oak Bay to be tougher as the 
season progresses. “They 
have the athletes, they just 
haven’t played enough yet.** 


Tense stock-car driver race 
resumes tonight at Western 


OPEN HOUSE . 
SAT. AFTERNOON 1:30-4.-00 
1.04 ACRES $85,500 


4628 WEST SAANICH ROAD 


3-B.R. home, full bamt., fireplace, triple carport 

PLUS 

large barn and shop, chicken house, good soil 


YOUR HOST 

LARRY PRUDEN 


656-3024 
477-7407 

MONTREAL TRUST COMPANY 



mtWMNM V IK KIKCI OF UMH 

SALE OF 
SERVICED LOTS 

Jhe Municipality offers for sals eight serviced residential 
lots situated on Hopkins Place (formerly Cumberland Rd.) 
being adjacent to and east of Reynolds Jr. & Sr. Secondary 
School. 

These lots. tegaHy described as Lots i to 3 and 5 to 9.' 
Section 32; Victoria Distnct. Plan 31646. have areas of 
approximately 6.000 square feet each and are priced 
from $24,500. 

Any person wishing further information should contact the 
Municipal Land Dept for full particulars. Phone 386-2241 
Local 220. F E H ar0 

Lands Commissioner 


LAST CHANCE! \ 

TO SAVE $7,000 ON 
REAL ESTATE COMMISSION 

This beautiful home in Ardmore is priced to sell at 
$113.500 00 Appraised at $130,000.00. Next week it will 
be listed with Real Estate for at least $7,000 more. 

3/4 acre, sauna, basement completed except for car¬ 
peting. 3 bedrooms. 3 bathrooms, dream kitchen, 2 
fireplaces, huge wraparound dedt electric Rt for green¬ 
house or workshop Sunken tub in ensuite and much 
more 


OPEN SAL SUN., MON. 1-4 P.M. 

“Beautiful Oak Bay ” . 
620 HAMPSHIRE ROAD 

We are pleased to offer this superb 1300 eq. ft 
home to you who enjoy the prestige end conve¬ 
nience of Oak Bay living. This charming residence 
has a Colonial appeal with shake roof, leaded 
windows and a full basement. The interior has just 
jTY been painted and the hardwood floors are gleaming 

To delight your discerning family, we offer a 24x14 
•VYv ft Itvtng room with fireplace and built-in bookcases. 
a Jk The dining room boasts a bay window and 

1*0 glass chandelier Entering the kitchen, please note 

▼ *W leak cupboards and the bright eating area. Two 
yl/ largo bedrooms up and one down complete this fins 

Hh home 

S4 VIEW WITH ME TODAY! 
fu ONLY $79,900 

W EILEEN MARTIN 

t*k 477-7050 

'flu T. L. MANN S ASSOCIATES LTD. 


Since yhe first race of the 
season Victorians Gordie 
Stone and Al Miller have run 
one-two in the standings of 
the Island championsip $e 
rfes for stock cars 

Now all Of a sudden, with 
only two races left In the sea 
son. a fellow named Dave 
Morris has upset the status 
quo. The Nanaimo driver 
came through with a strong 
showing in ms 1964 Chevelle 
on Andy Cottyn Day laM Sun¬ 
day and jumped from fourth 
to third place in the stand¬ 
ings. knocking Miller and his 
1968 Cougar into third spot 

Morris engineered the big 
advance by running second to 
Slone in the Cottyn race, win 
ning the fast heat and taking 
third in the trophy dash while 
Miller failed to make the lop 
four in any event. 

Stone, who has to do little 
more than show up the final 
two days to clinch the points 
championship, has built a 


373-point bulge through the 
reliable performances of his 
1966 Mustang. 

But the struggle for second 
place is fierce with Morris, 
Miller. Pat Philips, the rac. 
ing bank manager from Vic¬ 
toria. and Dean Cramb of 
Duncan separated by only 97 * 
points. 

The four continue their bat¬ 
tle tonight when the stock 
cars take to Western Speed¬ 
way for their next to last race 
of tljf season. Time trials 
start at 7 p.m. 

The program includes 
trophy dashes, heat races 
and a mec hanics race prior to 
the 35-lap main event. 

Western is busy again Mon 
we* 


day with the running of the 
Labor Day demolition derby. 
More than 60 cars are expect 
ed for the bump and-run rar¬ 
ing which includes powder 
puff racing. Gates open al 1 
p.m.. time trials start at 2 
p.m. and racing begins at 3 
p.m. 


OLONY 

+ MOTOR iss 

HORRY STEARNS 

AT THE PIANO BAR 
385-2441 vto 

>\< III jt.lll KiMiMZpC 


STOCK CARS 


Oordis Sion*. 86 Muktano 

1220 

Dave Morris, 64 Chevelle 

947 

Al Miller. 69 Cougar 

930 

Fat Rhinos. 45 Chevelle 

791 

Dean Cramb. 69 Chevelle 

733 

ken Alexander, 67 Csmero 

801 

Pe»e Yermoluk. 71 Hove 

556 

Mike French. 79 Malibu 

40? 

Bill Grant, N Chevelle 

394 

Jim Smith, 7J Nova 

379 


FORECLOSURE SALE 
WHIPPLE TREE INN 

Purpose built restaurant, log cabin construction, on 
2 acre site. Excellent exposure to Trans Canada 
Highway. 4 miles south of Duncan 

BRIAN SPARK or BOB SIMON 

PEMBERTON, HOLMES LTD. 

1000 GOVERNMENT STREET 384-8124 

VICTORIA. B.C V8W1X6 _?i»l 


Dolphins to host 
Lomas Monday 


OPfN 10 VlfW SAL t SUN. 1-7 P.M. 
9515 GLENELG AVE, 

(Off Bredley-Oyne off West Saanich Rd.) 


/ 


FAIRFIELD CLASSIC - SEAVIEWS 

OPEN SAT., SUN. 2-4 
9 Mom St. $89,900 



A truly cherished big tsmlly home with a vast watervlew of the 
Olympica. A lot of built-in character with beamed celling#, glass 
doors to handy den. dining aree with fireplace end two full baths 
on the main plus one uptteira. A total of tour bedroom*, the 
master with eeeview. Single car gsrsge end double driveway 
Nicely landscaped 63 x82' lot. Legal toning is up and down 
duplex, however, preeentiy being ueed as one family unit H 
preferred easy to convert to duplex again 


OLE KNUDSON 
479-2764 364-8001 

ROYALTRUST m 



The Character of the 
Edwardian period ... 

The Convenience of Modem Living 

WINDYHAUQH 

MANOR 

Four unique maisoneftae on \ acre of view property Suite# 
all have fireplaces, panelling high celling#, decks or petioe. 
Bathrooms and kitchens feature superb custom cabinetry 
and extensive uee of imported tiles. Well-established gar-, 
dens, private tea gardens beautifully landscaped common 
areas, barbecue area. and. if you wish, space for s vegetable 
garden of your own. Enormous conservatory and huge 
storage areas Price from $66,900 View with JOHN WEST 
or DAVID BtUJNGHAM 

Cedric Steele Realty ltd. 

1210-345 Ouoboc Street, 388-6258 



Victoria Dolphins are going 
to be working, and working 
hard, on Labor Day. 

The rejuvenated Dolphins 
face their toughest job so far 
this season as they host the 
powerful Vancouver Meralo- 
mas in a Big Four Junior- 
Football League game2 p.m. 
Monday at Royal Athletic 
Park. 

. The Meralomas were de¬ 
posed from their usual posi¬ 
tion as league champions by 
Renfrew Trojans last season 
but they’ve shown their ready 
to take the title back. The 
Meralomas have a 3-D record, 
including a win over Ren 
frew, and have outscored 
their opponents DD-7. 

Victoria is 1-2 and has been 
outscored 59-22. 

However, the Dolphins are 
showing more promise than 
they ha\e since 1973, and il i 
apparent in the league statis¬ 
tics. 

Dolphin quarterback Ber 


nie Kidd leads in passing 
yardage, receivers Bob 
McKeachie and Murray 
Clarke art* tied tor fourth in 
receptions and running backs 
Dave Fletcher and Kym 
Clarke are third and fourth 
respectively In rushing. 

Kidd has completed 22 of 44 
passes for a total of 273 yards 
while McKeachie and Clarke 
have caught seven passes 
each with McKeachie gaining 
110 yards and Clarke 54. 
Fletcher has 222 yards on 55 
carries and Kym Clarke has # 
carried the ball 36 times and ’ 
gained 175 yards. 

The Meralomas have great 
depth and their strength 
doesn’t show in most of the 
individual statistics but Dave 
Pachalko is second In scoring 
with 18 points on three touch¬ 
downs and kicker Bill Kolida 
is third with 13 points on two* 
field goalv six converts and 
three singles 


PROFIT 

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■ insr • (SIS) XS4-7M7 



Sport digest 



Former Aeros 
signed by Jets 


WINNIPEG (CP) - Winni¬ 
peg Jets of the World Hockey 
Association have announced 
the signing of four key play¬ 
ers obtained in the purchase 
of the defunct Houston Aeros 
franchise. ^ 

Signed to five-year Winni 
peg contracts were defence- 
man Scett Campbell and 
forwards Terry Ruakowski. 

and Rich 


Ruskowvkl. Lukowich and 
Preston formed Houston's 
top line last season and was 


OPEN HOUSE 

2-4 Sit. ind Sun. 

1831 SMUGGLERS 
COVE RO. 

TEN MILE POINT . 

EXECUTIVE 
WATERFRONT HOME 

KRI8 GUDJ0N880N 

721-3571 

CANADA TRUST 
*3 586-5131 


CADBORO BAY 

ACROSS FROM BEACH 

SUITE POTENTIAL 
3S12 CADBORO BAY ROAD 
OPEN HOUSE BAT. 2 to 4. An immaculate, 
versatile 3 bedroom home close to 10 Mile 
Point, a beach access just across the road. 
Large family room with fireplace. 3 bathrooms. 
Private back garden with fruit trees and vines. 
Excellent potential for separate suite. Built 
1962. Offered at the very reasonable price of 
$75,000. 

TED WALFORD 


505-1420 


BLOCK BROS. REALTY LTD. 


Office 
477-1841 

SIS 


JUST LISTED 
EXCLUSIVE $179,000 

780 LANDSEND RD. NORTH SAANICH 

Exciting waterfront home featunng true sea views from ail rooms. 3 large 
bedrooms — ail 4-piece eneulte. 3 living rooms a family rooms — all with 
fireplaces, superb galley kitchen, workshop, hot water heating, double carport 
ample parking, beautifully landscaped grounds of over one acre plus 173 feet 
of the choicest waterfront in Victoria. Home is modem B.C. contemporary with 
only the beet of materials used. A true executive dream home which should sen 
this weekend. Phoed right at $179.000. 

OPEN HOUSE 2-5 PM. SATURDAY, SUNDAY 

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PLEASE CALL 
J. a. YOUNG 506-1515 or 388-6275 Pag* 806 
MIKE RUDOY 8054080 

PARK PAORC MVESIMBITS 3834124 



PRESENT ALL OFFERS 

OPEN HOUSE SUN. 1:304:30 

3241 ALBION ROAD 


1200 eq. ft of tpecioue IMog n a no-step home w 
garage Thte home Doests of 2 good sued bedroom#, breakfast 
nook adjoining kitchen, dining end living room, laundry end etorege 
room. Situated on a large secluded tot with fruit tree#, a block from 
chopping and bus earvtoe. This 23-yeer-otd home w a "MUST" to 




FOR SPECIAL APPOINTMENT CALL: 

LAURIE COMO 

479-1179 380-6454 

9-Jx 


one of the better units in the 
WHA avthey combined for 80 
goals and 197 points. 

All four players had nego¬ 
tiated with National Hockey 
League teams this summer 
before agreeing to terms with 
the defending WHA cham¬ 
pion Jets. 

♦ w * 

CASTRO VALLEY. Calif. 
(AP) — Injured National 
Football League New Eng¬ 
land Patriots wide receiver 
Darryl Stingiey has devel¬ 
oped serious lung complica¬ 
tion^ his doctors reported 
Friday. 

“These problems, despite 
vigorous treatment perils 
ami are potentially life-threa¬ 
tening,’* the hospital said. 
“Hit condition is now con¬ 
sidered serious.’’ Stingiey 
was paralysed with a neck 
Injury suffered while trying 
to catch a pass in a pre-sea- 
son game. 

wee 

NEWPORT, RI. (AP) - 
Bonnie Shore of Newport’s 
Ida Lewis Yacht Club has 
won the North American 
women's sailing champion¬ 
ship. finishing third in the 
final race of Shields-class 
sloops after winning the first 
two races. 

The final race was won by 
Louise Aasley of the Royal 

Victoria (B.C.) Yacht Chib, 

‘ which placed fourth overall. 

WWW 

CLEVELAND (AP) - Out- 
fielder Johuy Grubb left the 
struggling Cleveland Indians 
on Friday in the middle of one 
of his better seasons in major 
league baseball 1 in a trade 
that sent him to Texas Rang¬ 
ers. The Indians announced 
the exchange for a player to 
be named later with just 
minutes to spare before a 
midnight Thursday night 
deadline. 

WWW 

CRANS-SIR SIERRE, 
.Switzerland (Reuter) — De¬ 
fending champion Severiano 
Ballesteros of Spain and Brit¬ 
ain's Nick Falda matched 
their opening (Ws in Friday’s 
second round of the Swiss 
Open golf championship to tie 
for the lead with another Brit¬ 
on. Nick Jab. who shot 67 for 
an eight-under-par 136. One 
stroke back was Bob Charles 
of New Zealand. 


POLYANTHUS 

Just starting to bloom. Plant now tor the 
best show next spring 

Bach. 

FORGET-ME-NOTS 



Bright Blue 
Ultramarine Blue 6 
Pompodour Pink. 6 


6 Plants 
Per Pack 


95 ' 


Planted now will vivo you o 
beautiful display next epring. 


"for every bloomin’ thing! 

Summar Hour, CLOSED SUNDAY 

Mon.-Sat. 9-5:30 478-1116 

4456 SAANICH ID. in the Royal OtIt Shopping Centre 


A 

m 


FORD FAIRMONT 
IS VICTORIA'S 
BEST SELUNC 
COMPACT 
DOMESTIC CAR 


Source ILL. 

Registrations 



TEST DRIVE THE 
SALES LEADER TODAY 

TEST DRIVE ONI TODAY AND SEE WHY 

FAIRMONT 2-DOOR SEDAN 

Stock No. 1943 

2.3 Litre 4-cylinder engine. 4 speed transmis¬ 
sion, whitewall tires, front 
disc brakes, exterior ac¬ 
cent group, under coat- 

. Ing...7 

26 mllM por gallon (city)* 

40 milas par gallon (highway)* 

•TRANSPORT CANADA RATINGS 


$4895 


PETER POLLEN FORD 


[ 


ION YATES AT COOK 


394-1144 


r 


f 














































































































t 


.12 DAILY COLONIST. Vlcloria. B.C., Saturday. September J, 197ft 


Douglas St. 
Baptist 

3277 Douglas St 
“ M. Kltay 


10:30 a.m. 

‘ FISHING AND 
0 FAITHJ” 

7:30 p.m. 
LEARNING NOT 
TO DOUBT” 


OLDFIELD 60SPEL 
CHAPEL 


*4Sa.«. Family BiMr S 
HAD i n. MsnUsf Srrvtoe 

T4« a-ai. Bv«ar ~ 


WEDNESDAY 
VM p.m. Prayer ai 
BIMeSfdy 


PAAC. 


Anthropoligst meets Island Baha'is 


TRINITY 

murmtuui church 

2004 nihmm Kona al 
Gor«* shopping Plata 

Tit* trirodh church 
Cloi* lo Motet* 

1 IlOO A.M. 

*m GLORIOUS LAMP 
OF HEAVEN” 

Sacrament of Christian 
Baptism 

MWftor Am. ft. ft. Smftk. MJt 


KNOX 

PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 

2964 Richmond Road 

“A rrtrwa* CNjrch Tta» Caret' 
Rav. D«V«4 A. Srerttv BA 

11 a.m. / 

THE STEADFAST 
BELIEVER ’ 

Rav. R. F. Cuwntaghsre 
Saraery FacllKir* 




Professor J. Jameson 
Bond, of Sftuth Mountain. 
Ont.. met recently in Victoria 
with Baha’is of Vancouver Is¬ 
land. 

Bond, an M.A. in anthro 
pology from the University of 
Toronto who has held a num¬ 
ber of university posts, and 
was co-chairman of the de 
partment of anthropology at 
the University of Alberta 
from 1969 70. 


mmmim 

Holyrood House - Saltire Room - 2315 Blanshard at Bay Si 
Rev R. Hartoach. minister m the Protestant Reformed Church## 
SUNDAY 10 a m. Preaching from Second Timothy 
3:30 p.m. Preaching Bible Doctrine 
Biblical Radio Ministries KLYN-FM 106 5 
Sunday: Lyndon P. R. Church 9 a m.. Retd Wit. Hour. 4 p m. 


St Andrew’s Presbyterian 

Downtime — Deagla* St. at Breeghtoe 
Ministry: Rev. Brace Molkn and Mrs. Chrissfe H»u 

11 hjr. “JESUS LEADING THE WAY" 

DR. J. S. CLARKE 

Nursery Caro - 

7 ml -NWNTMNS AND SOD'S HtESENR" 

Mrs Chrtooio Hogg 
Visitors Welcome 


Christian 

Science 

Sunday Services 

and 

Sunday School 
10:.1ft a.m. 

Wednesday 
Testimony Meeting 
S; ftft p .m. 

FIRST CHURCH ftF CHRIST 

iMnrrwT 


C hambers and Pandora 
Reading Room 

1210 Broad Street 
Weekdays • a.m. 5:3* p.m. 
Fri. ft a.m.-ft p.m. 

Sub A Holidays 24 p.m. 
Reading Room Extension 

Chambers and Pandora 
Wednesdays 2-4 p.m. 

All are i 


From 1972 74 he was with 
the Department of Regional 
Economic Expansion, latter 
ly as the senior social policy 
analyst in Ottawa. 

In 1947 he became a mem¬ 
ber of the Baha'i Faith. a 
world religion based on the 
life and teachings of 
Baha’u’llah. whose ex¬ 
pressed purpose is to unify 
mankind. Since lft47 Bond has 
been an active member of the 
National Spiritual Assembly, 
and is currently assistant 
secretary to that body. He 
and his wife. Gale, were 
named by the Guardian of the 
Baha'i Faith to be Knights of 
Baha'u'ilah for their pioneer- 


Unity not 'vague hope' 



iiki 

FIRST 

NAZARENE 

4277 QUADRA 


' (3*1(jwviwd MuiMiy) 

• 48 a * 

Sundry School CUhm 

lor d aQM 

11 A.M. 

” Prevailing Prayer” 

• P.M. 

“How to Start Everyday 
With God” 

T k) KQPN. Dm e.10 UimPICii 


ing service during the Ten 
Year Crusade. 

“The ideal of unity as envi¬ 
saged by the Baha'i Faith’*, 
says Bond, “II not some 
vague hope, but the logical 
conclusion of an historical 
process begun thousands of 
years ago. 

“The Baha’i Faith teaches 
that mankind as a whole 
grows and evolves in much 
the same way as an individ¬ 
ual. 

“Just as an individual goes 
through the stages of infancy, 
childhood, adolescence and 
maturity, so does mankind. 
This evolution is helped along 
and guided by God from age 
to age through the founders of 
the world religions. Krishna, 
Mofees, Zoroaster, Buddha. 
Christ. Mohammed, the Bab 
and Baha’u’ilah each acted in 


this capacity. Through their 
lives and teachings mankind 
was thrust forward into an 
other stage in its collective 
development. 


“With the appearance of 
Baha’u’ilah, the founder of 
the Baha’i Faith, the long 
childhood and adolescence of 
humanity has come to an end; 
the age of maturity is at 
hand. Baha'is believe man¬ 
kind la slowly tearing down 


VICTORIA ALLIANCE CHURCH 

I7D2 Tewatey Street — Poster B. OHM Crelg - T e le p kw n MS I 

11 AJD. “ONE THING GOO CAN'T 00“ 

7 ML SONGFEST IN THE GYM WITH 
HOLY COMMUNION 


FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 

Quadra and North Park 

11 ML “WHOM DO YOU WANT TO SCET 

Communion 

John A. Watson and Cecil Banter 
Organist and Choir Director Mr. John Tuns tall 


VICTORIA TRUTH CENTRE 

1201 Fort Street Minister Dr. Emma Smiley 

‘ Chang* your thinking, and changa your world" 

11:00 A.M. “GO WITH QOOT 
7:30 P.M. “THE ONLY WAY TO FLY” ’ 

Robert Ferguson at both services 


Orthodox Church 


t foONM Br 

rtrunlNl 

restart: 

Rev. Pr.GteS 


Ree. Ft. Gfc* Iomn 


MENNONfTF 
990 Falmouth Road 

NO SUNDAY SERVICE 

Rretor Q. L. Braun 4774111 



VICTORIA EVMCEUCAl 

LUTHERAN CHURCH 

4 _j t 

1 'nwcwrnucni t 

MIS Deafer* - PS 47S-TM0 

Dtvtae Hervtreft 11 a. mi. 
Seeds} NcS aal in4 a.at. 
Adah BIMr ( law I*IS La 
E. t. HaJUieia, Yaraory Pantar 


Bond 


CMMSTIAN APOSTOLIC CHURCH 

Orig-nai Christian 
Doctrine 

SUNBAY SERVICE 
A fttfMAY SCHOOL 

1140 a.m. 

?M3 Steeoun* s>. W.UOI4. ax. 


r 


FRIENDSHIP BAPTIST CHURCH 

Welcomes yon to its 

10 a.m. Worship Service and Sunday School 
• p.m. Evening Service 
The Pastor Upoahtng 

at Gordea Head Her. Centro. 1744 Felthan Rd. 
Pastor: Rev. E KrotofN. BA. B.D. 477-6478 
Affiliated with the Baptist General Conference 


#APOftt 


ueens 
venue 

APOSTOLIC CHURCH 


Victoria 


Baptist Chapel 

SBC 


kj 


Bible Study 
9:45 a.m. 



Worship 
11 a.m. 


Rev. Bo Brantley (Nursery Available) Phone 477-5474 
"We Icy*. because He first loved us. ~ /\ 4.19 


•04 QUEENS AVEHUE 

REV ALAN McLEAN 
382-7833 or 385-8404 


SUNDAY 

10:00 A.M. 
SUNDAY SCHO 
Open Settlor 

11:00 AJI. and 7 I 
WORSHIP 

TUBS., S P.M. 
BIBLB STUDY 


xmmcmuel 


BAPTIST CHURCH 

2121 CEDAR HILL CROSSROAD Tel. 592-2418 

9:30 and 11 a.m.° T ^s 

Pastor Archer applying the Book of 
ROMANS to contemporary life 

Sunday School ProqramatJ>othearvicaa 


THE CHRISTADELPHIANS 

13% Mt kre/ie Avenue 



Great News 

FOR THE WoHd 



CHRISTUM REFORMED 



4S1« W. Same* flow) 


10 a.m., 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. 
FOV L. SPIVEY. Pastor 


ELK LAKE BAPTIST 
The Church by the Lake 
U€3 Pat lay Htjttm.v 
Minister I Rirrlta* Harry Ptke 
Nlototer J. C. A. iarlao 

i#:J« a.at. 

WORNTNG WORSHIP 
■tV. W. J. BINGHAM 
ef Calfary 

A cordial ardrame i« ail 


Sible Addrei^ 

I very one Welcome 


“THE EMPTY GRAVE” 

T. tariing 


Sun. 7:36 p.m. 
No Collet tiom 


PARKDALE 9:43 a.m. Famity Sunday School 

EVANGELICAL 
FREE CHURCH 

a kMttg Ohnar... A earmf Comm u ne * ’ 


1095 Tolmlo. 382-7613 

RCV. A. KEN STROM 


Sunday School 9:30 a.m. 


Memorial Worship 11:00 a.m. 


“SUNDAY NIGHT AT 7“ 

A thrilling service of muaio, 


’’LABOUR, MANAGEMENT & THE BIBLE” 

Dr. Lloyd Plorco preaching 


Special welcome to UVk and tamosan students 

vs k&tkrn community baptist church 

St. Mathew* Anglican llrerc H — 771 GeMbtrtaa Ace. 
(Oppefttle Westbrook Plaza) 

Worship Service — 10 A.M. 

PicMr In. Gordoa Patter***, 474-2021 


PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLIES OF CANADA 


COLWOOD PENTECOSTAL 
CHURCH 


Pastor: D. L. McMMan. 2250 Sooko Rood 

10:30 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP 
7:00 p.m. EVENING WORSHIP 

Everyone Welcome 



' NORTH DOUGLAS PENTECOSTAL TABERNACLE 

Douglas at Caaterhory Pastor: Rev. Harold Pendray 

9:49 a.m. Sunday School 
For transportation phone 470-306# 

11 A.M. COMMUNION SERVICE 

Daalnr Oandran Giu aL Imm 

• DBMrV MS wg^MftimllVS 

7 P.M. REV. BOB MAIN 

from Scotland gueat preacher 

everybody Welcome 



tut nicy 
chunstian 

ceritHH 

Mtrauarw ML 

# 343-4185 

10:30 A.M. 
MORNINO WORSHIP 
COMMUNION 

7:00 P.M. 

BVBNING WORSHIP 

lurffff rTvVKIDO TOC MUIVMliy DffWCf 

• Tueo. 7 p.m. Prayer Meeting 


LNITSd 


OF VICTORIA 


AT THE 



833 PANDORA AVC. 385-7786 

i(ti«e preach Christ crucified 
VY risen end coming again’' 
Two Similar 

WORSHIP SERVICES V- 

046 and 1140 a.m 
“MONEY and 
MIRACLES’* * 

Th« Pastor Proaching 


: AMILY BIBLE 6CHOOL 

Including Special 
Adult Elect! vee 



“THE FIRST MARRIAGE” 


★ Vm 

* The Pastor Preeehtog 


eMuCJvy'Jntt &aamtlj Cljucii) 



t«|d 04 School 4544 >. Sum* M. 

10 a.m. la 12 Noon Peneiy BNHe Naiowa fe p 
7 p.m. averting hellowehtp Hour 
Paotor A. Shook 47*0060 


CHINESE PENTECOSTAL CHURCH 

800 Princess 

SUNDAY ft:45 a.m. Sunday School 
11:00 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. Worship Services 
Prayer — Wed., 7:3ft p.m. Youth — Fri., 7:3ft p.m. 


EMPRESS HOTEL 

PRINCE ALBERT ROOM 


Pastor Rev Steve Wong 383-3878 


the barriVs of prejudice that 
have divided us. It is a pain 
ful but necessary process, 
and the conclusion is a glon 
ous one characterized by the 
unification of the entire 
human race, and the emer 
fence of the first world civili¬ 
zation ” 


4C40Q0D9Oft3tt& 



ectives 


•Jfctt&ttttdHMMMr: By Bet. J. A. 




I shuddered a little as I 
read a recent news story 
about the religion editor of a 
newspaper in a large city in 
the U.S.A. 

A few months ago this man. 
a middle-aged ordained min¬ 
ister who is a graduate of the 
Harvard Divinity School 
(heavy with prestigetnd dig 
nity, that school), embarked 
on a project to do for the 
churches of his city what the 
critics on the newspaper’s 
staff were doing for the 
theatres and the movie- 
houses and the restaurants 
and the arts. 

Each Sunday he attends the 
service in one of the city’s 
churches and then gives it a 
rating which he represents 
with up to 12 stars. “I rate 
them,” he explains, “on the 
basis of how the service af¬ 
fected me. how it affected the 
regular congregation, and 
what’s going on—or not going 
on—that seems to be keeping 
everybody else away from 
church.” 

He«ays that the clergy and 
their congregations seem to 
believe that if they are in 
God s work they don’t have to 
answer to anyone for the kind 
of job they are doing. He feels 
that it is both %ir and benefi¬ 
cial for him to comment on 
boring sermons, gloomy 
music, and chilly, unfriendly 
church member*—and then 
give their churches the ap¬ 
propriate number of stars. In 
more than six months he has 
only twice awarded the maxi¬ 
mum number of stars. 

Since beginning this 
project the religion critic has 
been receiving angry’ phone 
calls and hate mail from irate 
readers. * Letters and public 
opinion seem to be running 
about two-to-one in favor V 
firing me,” he reports. 


Pastors of chuches in that 
city which have not yet had a - 
visit from the wandering reli¬ 
gion editor probably now ex 
perience the nervous fantods 
every Sunday morning just 
before the service.. 

I have the feeling that I 
would be terribly unea«y if I 
knew that a hand-nosed reli¬ 
gion critic from a newspaper 
could be in a pew to assess 
how well I am doing my job 
and how the organist and 
choir are doing theirs and 
whether the members of my 
congregation give strangers 
a warm reception. (My wife, 
who drew my attention to the 
news story’, suggests that if I 
had such a threat hanging 
over my head I might be en 
couraged to haee my hair cut 
more often ) 

For some time now the 
church has been wallowing in 
self-criticism. We ministers 
. play the game w ith some zest 
—although we do (end to deal 
in large, vague generalities, 
as if all the bad things are 
being done, and good things 
not being done, by some un¬ 
identified people out there 
somewhere. That, of course, 
is much safer than getting 
down to particulars—at least, 
for public consumption. 

This project, though, sug 
gests a useful spiritual disci¬ 
pline for pastors and their 
congregations. A pastor, as 
he prepares for the coming 
Sunday, can ask himself. 
“How many stars would an 
honest, informed, fair visit¬ 
ing critic give me?" And the 
church members can ask 
themselves. “Would a critic 
find us friendly and think that 
we really care about the 
church and its services of 
worship ’* 


I: v 

I Silver Threads ! 



Pf N TtCOST Al CHURCH 
84, North Par* SI 
384 7633 384 0113 


Had « 

e ee *nr 

idings 


GOO SWORD 
AS IT IS 
FOR 

MEN AS THEY 

ARE 


Pastor E E AUSTIN A»a i G W KRAUSE 


11 AM. 

FAMILY WORSHIP 

• Commumoo Service 


7 P.M. 

GOSPEL RALLY 

S Music end Singing 
• Everyone Welcome 


Find Reality In Christ at Qlad Tiding* 




The 

Meeting at Royal Oek km 
Way 4680 Elk Laks Drive 

A NON-DE NOMINATION AL 
CHARISMATIC FELLOWSHIP 
A T#4 


Teem Mintoters 


BRIAN RUDD CRUSADC 

at SACRED HEART CATHOLIC CHURCH 


There'a Room at the Inn for You " 

- m ^ BsAuMei4 

Nuiwy DffYlOt rTOVIOfa 


“SAANICH” 

TUESDAY to FRIDAY — 
8:30 a.m. — billiards, drop- 
ins. shuffleboard. pingpong 
— 11:45 a.m. — dinner. 

MONDAY - LABOUR 
DAY, Centre open from 1-4 
jpp.m. for bridge, billiards, 
drop-ins. 

TUESDAY — ft a.m. carpet 
bowling; 1:15 p.m., progres¬ 
sive whist. 

' WEDNESDAY - 1 pm. 
films; 7:3ft p.m. dance. 

THURSDAY - ft am., 
Royal Hudson Train trip; ft, 
carpet bowling; 1 p.m., pro¬ 
gressive bridge. 

FRIDAY — ft a.m.. carpet 
howling; 1:30 p.m., jack 0; 
7:3ft. progressive whist. 

SATURDAY - 9:30 a.m , 
Songmeo practice; 1:3ft p.m., 
cribbage, billiards, drop-ins, 
7/ Bingo, everyone wel¬ 
come.proceeds to Furnish¬ 
ings Fund. 

esquimalt 

MONDAY — Closed For 
Labour Day Holiday 
TUESDAY — noon, lunch; 
1:3ft p.m., chess and carpet 
bowling. 1:3ft to 2:30 p.m., 
senior swim. 

WEDNESDAY - 1ft a m 
Silver Singers; noon, hot 
lunch; 1:3ft p.m., drop-in 
crafts class, whist. 

THURSDAY - 10 a m., 
writing workshop, noon, 
lunch. 

FRIDAY — 10 a.m, 

ceramics (Heather Dent stu¬ 
dios), carpet bowling; noon, 
lunch. 

VICTORIA 

TUESDAY through FRI¬ 
DAY — 8 30 a m., drip-in, 
cards, shuffleboard, pool; 
9:30, arts and crafts; 1H30. 
lunch; 1 p.m., arts and 
crafts. 

MONDAY — Labor Day, 
open 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. for 
drop-ins. 7, wbist. / 

TUESDAY - ft a.m.. Rods 
and Reels club; 2:30 p.m., 
bowling at Town and Coun¬ 
try; 7:15, old time dance, 
members only. 

WEDNESDAY — 11:30 

a.m. to 1 p.m., health coun¬ 
selling; l p.m., chess club, 
stamp club. 7. whist. 

THURSDAY - 2 p.m., old 
time dance. 

FRIDAY — 1:15 p.m., 
bridge; 7, cribbage. 

SATURDAY — 11 am., 
drop-in, shuffleboard, pool, 
cards; l p.m., chess club; 
1:45, whist; 7,500 card gamr 


SUNDAY — 1 to 4 p.m , 
drop-ins. 

TICKETS for day trips: 
Gulf Islands round trip. Sept. 
14. $2.75, Butchart gardens. 
Sept. 21. $5.75; Mystery. 
Sept. 28, $8: Bellingham, Oct! 
3. $8.50; fall foliage Oct. 7-10. 
$132 each; Reno tour. Oct 
1-7. $160 each, twin basis 


Fraternal 
meeting 
this week 

Victoria's Christadelphian* 
will hold their annual Frater 
nal Gathering this weekend 
Tom Barling, from Eng 
land, will be main speaker 
today and Sunday. Barling 
recently retired from his 
work and is devoting the next 
few months to visiting Chris 
tadelphian churches through 
out Canada, helping them in 
Bible study and pastoral 
work. He will speak on the 
theme The Living Bread 
Throughout the month of Sep¬ 
tember he will be with the 
Victoria group leading a dr 
tailed study of certain parts 
of the scriptures and in 
strueting in different parts of 
church administration. 

. Unlike many churches, the 
functiin of the Christadel- 
phians is carried out by its 
members around the world 
on a voluntary scale. They 
have no paid preachers or 
officers to carry out tha 
weekly services or the up¬ 
keep of church. 

A spokesman for tha 
church in Victoria said, “The 
apostle Paul and others Uka 
him set the pattern when they 
refused to be dependent upon 
churches for their livelihood 
but by their own hands pro¬ 
vided for the necessities of 
life. 

“While this system placet a 
heavy load on some at times, 
it d(ws provide for a healthy 
church and a congregation 
that is alive and not daad 
being aware that each one is 
an important part of the body 
of Christ and in their small or 
large part they help to keep 
that body alive in their gen 
• eration.” 




1 


I 





















































































































































Food for thought 
on hungry world 


DAILY COLONIST, Victorii, B.C., Saturday* September 2, 1978 ' 13 

Persecution stories first hand 

Uganda pastor coming 


Mooneyham and orphan saved under (Ire 


ST. ANDREWS CATHEDRAL (B.C.l 

Blanohard ano View Street Phone 308-5571 

Sunday MiSStS: 8 00 * m . • 30a m . 11 00 a m 

16 30pm and 500 pm. 

5 00 pm Saturday 

Confassians: Saturday 'Um.ioNoon. 3to4p m. 

■ t and 7 to 7 3(\ p m: 


- 

F.G.B.M.F.I. 

N 


BREAKFAST 



Oak Bay Marina Restaurant 
SAT. SEPT. 9th—8:20 A.M. 



S2.50 

Brinq a friend" 

J 



CHURCH OF OUR LORD 

Ih—b»Hl mi Hawbard It, Victoria, 1C. 3S3-891S 

11S9AM. 

HOLY COMMUNION 
Dr. Andrew |. Mow at 1 k 
"FINDING GOD THROUGH 
SURRENDERS 

Nursery Available 
during the service 

Rooter. Ro* Or. A. J. Mowatt 




PARISH of ST. ATHANASHIS 

(Anglican Church of North America) 
provides 

CHRISTIAN INSTRUCTION 
FOR CHILDREN 

COMMENCING SEPT. 10 at 1:45 P.M. 
GRACE CHURCH — 1273 Fort Street 

Remember Christ a command 

Softer Wife children . to come onto me. ** 

Phono 596-4108 after 5 p m tor further Information 

FOR ADULTS: 

SUNG MASS next Sunday, Sept. 3rd at 8 A M. 
Subsequent Sundays at 2 P.M. 

Fr P D. Wilkinson Fr. R. C. Henstock 


THE 



STORY 


The Book of Acts — Re-enacted 

* ANGELIC VISITATIONS * ONE RAISED PROM THE OIAD 
6,PIRE-VISIBLE AS IN AOS * UNDtRCROUND CHURCHES 
☆ MIRACLES AND SIGNS * REPUGEi CHURCHES 
* MIRACULOUS RELEASE PROM PRISON 

Hear 

GOD'S GOSPEL OF POWER 

as told by the President of 
^ Glad Tidings of Uganda 

PASTOR I0SHUA KAMYA 

at 

VIQORIA ORANGE HALL — 1620 Fernwood Road 
Sunday, September 3rd at 7 p.m. 

Kpnnvwd by Glad Tiding* Miswonery Society of Vencouter 0-2x 



A leading expert on world 
hunger will be in Richmond 
on Sept. 10 with some food for 
thought for Supporters of 
Worid Vision, the non-profit 
relief agency he heads 

Dr. Stan Mooneyham. au¬ 
thor. TV host, evangelist and 
world traveller, has seen 
first-hand the plight of starv¬ 
ing RedRle 

Mare than that, he’s the 
kfod of man who does some¬ 
thing about it. His interviews 
with hundreds of Third Worid 
poor, along with factual docu¬ 
mentation, are contained ip 
his book What Do You Say to 
a Hungry Wortf?, one of sev¬ 
eral books he has written or 
co odited on the plight of 
those lesa fortunate 

His frequent travels tor 
Third World nations and con¬ 
stant exposure to human suf¬ 
ferings pave made Mooney 
hani a champion of the "Tittle 
people" in developing coun 
tries, many of whom struggle 
to survive on less than $200 a 
year. 

“We put evangelism first 
and last in our work, but this 
does not mean that every 
thing we do has a direct 
evangelistic connection. We 
don't stamp ‘Jesus Saves’ on 
every vitamin pill. We simply 
try to demonstrate Christian 
love in tangible ways. I feel it 
would be phoney and mnnipu 
lntive to provide help to suf¬ 
fering people only because 


Bible 

degree 

plan 

lost 

CALGARt (CP) — Rev. 
Jim Cantelon of Newmarket. 
Ont.' has been unsuccessful 
in at bid to have Canada s 

Pentecostal Bible colleges 
set up a degree program. 

During a question period 
last Saturday at the Pente¬ 
costal Assemblies of Can¬ 
ada's 31st biennial conven¬ 
tion. he asked the. church’s 
national executive to debate 
the issue at a future meet¬ 
ing- 

‘‘This is a day when we 
have to give serious consider¬ 
ation to granting degrees,'’ 
Cantelon told the 700 dele¬ 
gates attending the conven¬ 
tion which ended Tuesday. 

But his proposal was not 
presented in the form of a 
resolution and died in a short 
debate, while delegates were 
awaiting election results of 
the national executive. 

Rev. Robert W. Taltinger 
was elected to his sixth term 
as genera! superintendent of 
the Pentecostal Assemblies 
of Canada 

Taitinger. 51. a native of 
Clareshoim, Alta , was first 
elected as general superin¬ 
tendent in 1%8. 

Rav. Charles Yates, a for¬ 
mer pastor of Calgary’s Capi¬ 
tal Hill Pentecostal Church, 
was re-elected general secre¬ 
tary for a two-year term. He 
was elected Alberta district 
superintendent in 1968. 

Rev. Carman W. Lynn, a 
native of Battersea. Offt.. 
who has been a pastor at 
Ontario and B.C. churches, 
was re elected executive 
director of overseas mis¬ 
sions. Dr. Robert Argue was 
named executive director of 
home missions, Bible col¬ 
leges and men's fellowship 
and Rev. S. D. Feltmate was 
re-elected executive director- 
of Christian education and 
youth programs. 

There are about 250,000 
members in the churchy 
A telephone ‘‘offerama” 
sponsored by the conference 
raised $450,000 last weekend. 
The objective was $350,000. 
Alberta led the contribu 
tions with a total of $111,009 
and British Columbia was 
second with $97,000 The Pen¬ 
tecostal Churches in Quebec 
telephoned in a total of $2,- 

gja 

The money raised in the 
offerama will be used in Ca¬ 
nadian home mission 
projects and in 10 overseas 
fields where the Pentecostal 
Assemblies have evangelis¬ 
tic and educational facili¬ 
ties. 


they are potential evangelis¬ 
tic statistics." 

Not content merely to write 
and talk of help, he plows into 
trouble head on. A good ex¬ 
ample is the time he char¬ 
tered an old twin-engine Con- 
vair 240 airplane, slipped 
through flak over the be¬ 
sieged Cambodian capital of 
Phnom Penh and airlifted 23 
orhpans to new lives in the 
United States. 

Not content either to allow 
his fellow Americans total in¬ 
dulgence in enjoyment of 
their Thanksgiving Day cele¬ 
brations, he reminds them 
that 12,000 of their fellow 
human beings will die of star¬ 
vation while they're gorging 


on turkey and dsesfsing 
Mooneyham believes some¬ 
body has to do something to 
alleviate the chronic hunger 
in the world. That’s why he 
belongs to World Vision 
which now cares for more 


Uganda is very much be¬ 
fore the eyes of the world 
these days in the area of re¬ 
pression of human rights, 
especially the repression of 
the freedom of worship. 

Coming to speak in Vic¬ 
toria at 7 p.m. Sunday at the 
Victoria Orange Hall, 1620 




than 155,000 children in about Fernwood, is a man who has 
50 less-developed countries, experienced first-hand se 


The 1977 budget for World 
Vision International included 
$5.8 million for projects to 
help people in these countries 
become more self-reliant. 

World Vision supporters 
can hear Mooneyham on 
Sept. 16 at 7:30 p.m. in the 
Richmond Inn, 7551 Westmin¬ 
ster Highway on the north 
side between No. 3 Road and 
Gilbert Road Ik Richmond 


THE PLACE: SACRED HEART CATHOLIC CHURCH 

Kail 


THE DATES: STARTING SEPT. STH 
> THE 1Mb EVERY EVENING AT 7230 PJL 
BRING A FRIEND • All SEATS FREE 


0-23X „ 


1\ ANGLICAN 
J V RENEWAL 
CENTRE 

Prayer end 
Praise Service 

Evory Friday 7.30 p.m. 

tn 

St. Saviour s Church 

Cor Catherine a Henry tin 



Rand before and after mending ways 

Catholics rescue 
charismatic rally 

It was going to be ‘Under the Big Top.’ 

Then it nearly wasn’t to be at all. 

But, because of a gracious move on behalf of 
Sacred Heart Roman Catholic church, the three-week 
Brian Ruud crusade sponsored by the charismatic 
Church of the Way will be held. It starts Friday at 7:30 
p.m. as scheduled—though under the roof of the 
Sacred Heart Church, 4040 Nelthorpe. off McKenzie, 
and not under a tent at Royal Oak as originally 
planned. 

Ruud comes to Victoria from an appearance as 
main speaker at the Jesus '78 festival held on 300 acres 
of Pennsylvania farmland, before a gathering of 80,000 
of which 15,000 stood up to accept the invitation to 
commit themselves to Christ. 

One of the co-ordinators, Billy Bennett, says muni 
cipal bylaws prevented the tent setting for the meet 
ings of world-renowned speaker Ruud whose climb 
from the despair of alcoholism, drug addiction and life 
of clime has become a symbol of hope for any who are 
willing to commit their lives to Christ. 

"It's a beautiful thing that Father Guy, the pastor 
of Sacred Heart, and Bishop De Roo have given their 
blessing to Rev. Bill Johns, pastor of Churcn of the 
Way, for the crusade by opening the doors of the 
church for this important charismatic mission." 

Ruud, 31, was born in Saskatoon. His life of crime 
began at age five and drifted downhill from cigarettes 
and aloe hoi to drugs and armed robbery. 

Christ came In the solitary confinement cell 
of a Canadian federal prison. 


vere persecution for his faith 
in Christ but he has also seen 
the power of God move many 
times in deliverance for him¬ 
self and others. 

Pastor Joshua Kamya Mu- 
soke of Kampala. Uganda, is 
the president of Glad Tidings 
of Uganda. He is the leader of 
more than 400 underground 
churches in Uganda and as 
such has been the prime tar¬ 
get for imprisonment and nu 
merous threats on his life. At 
one point, he was in • prison 
in Kampala from which no 
one is released alive. 

Thrown into a blood-spat 
tered cell with no food, no 
water, and no sanitary facili¬ 
ties. he began to pay and 
praise God In spite of his 
circumstances as the Apostle 
Paul did many times 

Musoke said God respond¬ 
ed by giving him a deep 
peace and also by speaking 
audibly to him and telling 
him not to fear and that 
everything would be all right 
The next morning the guard 
came and set him free—an 
unprecedented event for that 
prison. 

The biblical Book of Acts 
has been re-enacted over and 
over with angelic visitations, 
visible fire as in Acts, chap¬ 
ter^ miracles and signs, one 
raised from the dead, under¬ 
ground churches and miracu¬ 
lous release from prison. Mu¬ 
soke will expand on this and 
more. 

Musoke is the fruit of mis¬ 
sionary work pioneered in 
Uganda by the Glad Tidings 
Missionary Society of 3156 
Fraser Street, Vancouver. 


Magazine story 
hits censorship 

Censorship in schools in¬ 
hibits the learning process 
and is undemocratic and un- 
Christian. according to an ar¬ 
ticle in the current issue of 
the United Church Observer. 

The magazine article says 
that banning certain books, 
films and tapes from schools, 
“attacks one of the best ways 
for teachers to bring learning 
to life, and is imcompatlble 
with the free development of 
the individual student for life 
in an open world " 


f 


Musoke 

Missionaries with Kenyan 
interpreters first went to 
Uganda In 1956 and God start¬ 
ed a revival from the very 
first street meeting they held 
in Kampala. The Ugandans 
challenged them on the real¬ 
ity of their God and brought a 
deaf and dumb woman to 
them for healing. She was 
instantly healed and began to 
speak and hear perfectly 
What followed was a reviv- 


Anglican 


al that spread across the 
country to the extent that in 
1974. when all foreigners 
were forced to leave the coun 
try, there were 200 active 
churches and pastors. 

Musoke then took over the 
leadership of Glad Tidings of 
Uganda and since 1974, under 
heavy persecution, the work 
grewto more than 400 active 
churches today. 

Musoke recently appeared 
with pastor Maureen Gaglar 
di on .CJOR’s Sunday Line 
program and within the 
month has scheduled appear 
antes on 100 Huntley Street 
and the 700 club. 

For further Information 
about Sunday’s meeting, call 
382-6325. 


Record for Holy Writ 


After this weekend, no one 
will be able to say Victoria 
hasn’t a prayer. 

It will have the longest 

prayer in the worid. At least 
briefly. 

Emmanuel Baptist Church 
plans to establish an original 
world record for inclusion in 
the 1979 Guinness Book of 
World Records. 

The aim Is to inscribe the 
Lord's Prayer in 20-foot let¬ 
ters across more than half a 
mile of aand at Willows 

.Beach 

The purpose, say church 
members, is to bring the good 
news of Christ to people by 
using innovative methods. 

In promotional hand bills, 
the church describes the 
event this way . 

WHEN? Sunday. Sept. 3. 7 
a .to. to 1 p.m. (Working for 
the Lord on Labor Day.) 

Bey’s Wil¬ 
lows Beach (the whole beach! 
Forecast: sunshine.) 

HOW? By inscribing In the 
sand with 20-foot tettervjhe 
Lure's Prayer all along the 
2,900-foot beach. 

Event co-ordinator Wayne 
Wickett says he hopes Sun¬ 
day's happening will Inspire 
other churches with larger 
beaches nearby to try to 
outdo the record by making 
the holy writ even larger. 

• 

The Greater Victoria Coun 
cii of Churches will hold its 
first fellowship lunch of the 
season at noon, Thursday, 
Sept. 14, at Grace Lutheran 
Church. 1273 Fort. 

Speaker will be Rev. Remi 
De Roo, Roman Catholic 
Bishop of Victoria. Hit topic 


CHURCH 

CHRONICLES 

is Concerns of the Canadian 
Conference-on Social Devel¬ 
opment. 

Tea and coffee will be pro¬ 
vided but bring your own 
lunch. 

• 

Dr. Hugh McLeod cele¬ 
brates the 40th anniversary 
of his arrival at First United 
Church (Quadra at Bal¬ 
moral) on Sunday. Sept. 10. 
when the title of Minister 
Emeritus will be conferred 
upon him at the morning ser¬ 
vice. 

A reception will follow the 
service so that many friends 


of Dr and Mrs. McLeod will 
have the chance to speak with 
them. 

• 

Rev. Andrew Mowatt will 
resume a 7 p.m. vesper ser¬ 
vice at the Church of Our 
Lord, Humboldt and Blan- 
shard, on Sundays starting 
Sept. 10. 

The service will include a 
favorite hymn sing and bible 
study. Part of the Reformed 
Episcopal Church of Canada, 
the Church of Our Lord was 
founded in 1874. 

Mowatt, who has been re¬ 
covering from a heart attack 
suffered last year, said he 
was looking forward to the 
hours of evening fellowship 
and study. 


CITY AND DISTRICT CHURCHES 


GOSPEL 


CHAPELS 


OAKlands chapel 
F ernwood and Cntar Hill Rood 
SUNDAY 

♦ S a m. Breaking of tread 
11 is a m Sunday School and 
Family BJbtaHOur 
Soeaker Mr. L. Wallace 
* X pm Evening bar vice 
Speaker Dr A Funk 
Thurs , I 00 p m 
Prayer i Bible Study 

,VICTORIA GOSPEL CHAPEL 
71S Pandora Avenue 
SUNQAY 

I aam Lord’s Supper 
11 Warn 


Family Bible Hour 
7pm Evenmg Service 

r at Bern SarvKti 


WEDNESOAY 7 4SP4A 


m. 0. tfitcMI. Nigeria 


SPIRITUALISM 


VICTORIA CHRISTIAN 
SPIRITUALIST CHURCH 
I* Fort Sire* 

*. u am 


t CIMrvovanm at tugrv larvtct 



Nr earte «i 

D-l-A-L A 
PRAYER 

Phono 

595-3635 

MNmx 


Oak Say IMte4 Ckurok 


pPEN DOOR SPIRITUALIST CHURCH 
UMCoekHra* 

Sun 7 pm Mv. 0. Corrigan 
Wad 7:Rpm 


SOCIETY OF FRIENDS 
(Quaker*) 

MEETING FOP WORSHIP 
SUNDAY 11 AM 
VISITORS WELCOME 
UIFERN ST. 


UNITARIAN 


UNITARIAN CHURCH 
106 Superior S*#ei — 
No Sunday Service 
VI UC Summer Como 


LUTHERAN CHURCH OF 
VTHE CROSS 

Coder MIR and Cedar Mill Croas Roads 
Allred J C Johnson. Pastor. 477-asi 

* Mem 

Divna worship Service 

The Church Where Families 


E vengHfcel Luther an Church of Canada 
flTLCC formertv A.LC ) 


HOPE LUTHERAN CHURCH 
MISSOURI SYNOO 
1924 Car rick Street oft Foul Bav 

TIN Rev L M Certun.Pa*or m m 
Sunday School 9 M a m 
N M am Divine Worship Service 
a Church of The Lutheran Hour 
and "ThuHiteUta" 

GRACE LUTHCRAN CHURCH 


177| Fort Strwt X 
Minister. Rev. Ronald C. Ftalson 
Lutheran Church In America 
(Acroaa from Central junior High) 
11am. Wormp 
12 IS pm FeRwoNp Lundhaon 


GOOD 


LUTHERAN 
CHURCH 

SIS Cedar HM Road 



REDEEMER LUTHERAN CHURCH 
Cpmar JackMn and JwAlm 
Warn. Worship 

Minister Harmon Picket. <7MU0 


SfVRNTH OAY ADVENTIST 


SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH 

<M Pandora Ave at vancouwr St 
sabbath Schoot-a jo am Saturday 
Wo rship Sar vkp-HM am. 

p attar LvtM Baarg (7)1-37*1 


Attend the Church 
of your choice 


chastchucch 

cathedcad. 

Quadra at Courtney 
P blocka up from Douglas 
8:00 a.m. Holy Eucharist 
9 30 a m. Family Eucharist 
11 OO a m. Sung Eudharist 
5:15 p.m. Holy Eucharist 

7 30 p m. Evensong 

WEEKDAYS 
Marttna 9 OO a m. 

Evensong 5 15 p m. 

Holy Eucharist 
7ues. and Wed 11 a m. 

Thurt 7:30 a m 
Fri. 12:15 noon 


St. John’s 

1011 Quadra Near Pandora 
8 a.m., 0:36 a m. Ik 11 a.m. 
Preacher: 

Rev. Christopher Lonsdale 

TEar*.. IB:3P a.m. 

Haty Communion 
The ■§«. a. MmIm. jiu-Tiea 


ST. BARNABAS 


I ts a.m. taattiasaodU_ 

l#:» am. Soap Wan. 
fitf pm. h iQHH 
HOLY COMMUNION DAILY 
IV art. D. a. C kassels 


SL Christopher’s 

Carey Road At Tllllcnm 

Family Service *:*• a.m. 
Sunday school »:M a.m. 
Rector Wes. P. W . Kiev 


ST. DUNSTAN’S 

Ty ndall and San Jnan 

Ihe Rev . Brian Paxe 
t ea a.m. Holy Communion 
9:4S a.m. Family Kucharist 
and Sunday School 


ST. HOME THE MAJTTYK 


Bov. Barry Jenka. 477-0705 
8:00 a.m. Holy Communion 

" 9:30 a.m. 

Pariah Famtty Eucharist 
11:00 a m* 

Choral Euchariat 


&t. Cukr’s 

Car. Cedar KM mi Cedar MB X M. 

TV Rev. 

U> Reader tar. 4. L. Nan* 

*:PB a.m. Holy Commnaioo 

I1J0B a.m. Choral Eacbarfet 
7:JI p.m. Even non* 


s>t. ftftcrS 

Ouadra at M. Pater* Rd. 


LfcV. C KARI.FX A. HAMS.A 


SL Philip’s 



kUi 

U4Sa.ni. (Vral Camm 


United" 

FIRST UNITED 
CHURCH 

Quadra at Balmoral 

Rev. Huftb M. Hunter 
Rev. Gear Re Strother, 

Mr. Lawreuce E. Mooa 

10 A.M 

MORNING WORSHIP 

“WORK. THE 
CREATIVE ADVENTURE” 

Rev. Hugh Hunter 

Baby Creche and Toddler 
Facilities a\ ailable 

Maslc Director t.rorrr Warn 
Organist. Carrier Da Vat Brew in 


METROPOLITAN 

UNITED CHURCH 
Pandora al Quadra Street 


Rev. A. E K*ng. B A . D O 
Rav. I. Laura Butter. R.A.. I.TH. 
Ray. A. Comer. BA. 

11:00 A.M. 

“A MIGHTY WORK 
FOR GOD” 

The Nov E. Laura Butler 

Croeho and Pro-school 
Coro avatiabta 


CENTENNIAL 

UNITED CHURCH 
Gorge Road and David Street 
(Opp. Colony Motor Inn) 

Rev. G. A. Mt Met han 

11:00 A.M. 

"LIFE TAKES ON 
A NEW MEANING'* 
Baby t ie s he a nd Nursery 


tar. Krnrvl Williams—Organ*-.! 


ST. AJOAN’S 

UNITED CHURCH 

Btrkmaad at Cedar Hill X Read 
MlaKterr. let. J. Ear AJiaa 
Rev. C lare Holmes 
OrgaaMt: tar*. Henna* 


summer Service Time 

Rev. Clare A. Holmes 
C'EKC HI PKOXIIIt I) 


• OAK BAY 
UNITED CHURCH 

r Granite and Mitchtall 

1 1 R-fP. 

WORSHIP 
“WORKING 
WAGES" 

*tv M Van Dnitga 

Nuraarf and Kindergarten 

DIAL-A-PRAYER 595-3635 


ONTTEOCHOBCH^sX^Cl 


I ST. MARY'S 

ELGIN ROAD 

TV Partab Cbarrb ef Oak Bay 
TV Van. HyeW J. Jaoet 
L. TV. Eerier 
»:» e.UL Rely C emmnjUee 
t » am. Family F erkarbt 
lf:« a.m. Cbarai Cemmaalaa 
T:W pm. Eveasana 


ST. MATTHIAS’ 

Richmond at fUchardaon 
Rrrior 

Canoe W. E.GrtcabaUhL. Th- 


Rev. G. H. Rocm. B-VW . MJXv. 

I:N a.m. Hal) Communion 
if:Jd ML Choral 

Nnraerv 



CAD60R0 BAT UNITED 

-<25 ARBI’TVS ROAR 

Res. Joke M. Daildstm. tT7-tflt 

SUMMER SERVICES 
10:06 A.M. 
Nursery tare 
Friendly welcome tu visllorv 
and tourists — Coffee Hour. 


FAIRFIELD 
UNITED CHURCH 

(censor Moss al Fairfield) 

Minister Bet H. W. Kertet. Pk I) 
Oraaotsl; Robert (neper. I..L.C.M. 
Oierrk Services u a m. 

H. ta Kerlrv 


ST. DAVID ST-THE-SEA 

8184 Cordova My *d- 

Beeler Bov Andrew B. Gate* 

—I l HojyC- 


HOLY COMM I NION 
i»L Ted and 9tk .tamdat 


GORDON HEAD . 
UNITED CHURCH 

Nav Rumen K Vnhert. 


477-0417, 477-680* 

11:15 A.M. 

M ARE WE BEING 
CHEATED?" 

For Labor Sunday 
Kindergarten in (be 
Cbarrb Hall 
Meettaa at M. Daaatan , 
Church, comer at Tyndall 
and saa Jaaa 


JAMES MY UNITED CHURCH 

S11 Michigan 9treet 
A Meedtj cherrb servlaa 
IV wbale mmmaaily 
stare 1*1 

Sunday V tanal — 10:45 a.m. 
Moraine Worship — I I da a m 

Minister: Be*. Bert FenytV 

8H8I_BH-mn 


a 

























































































































































I 


1 1 DAILY COLONIST. \ uiona, B C.. Saturday . September 2. 1979 


Burrows’ second home run 
keeps Budgets slate clean 


SAINT JOHN, N B. — Vic¬ 
toria Budgets take their un¬ 
beaten record against New¬ 
market. Oot. in the Canadian 
senior “A” men's fastball 
championships today. 

Bob Burrows cracked his 
second home run in as many 
games and Dave Wilson 
pitched a three-hitter to lift 
Budgets to a 2-1 preliminary 
round victory over Frederic 


ton, N.B. and to first place in 
Blue Division. 

The defending champions 
and Newmarket, runner up 
in Bed Division, play at 7:30 
a m. Victoria time. 

Budgets managed only 
three hits off of Frederic¬ 
ton’s Brent Pugh. They 
scored in the second inning 
when Burrows walked, went 
to second on a single by Bob 


Holness and scored on a dou¬ 
ble by Rudy Teicrob. It was 
the third run-scoring hit by 
the utility infielder picked up 
from Abbotsford Rempel 
Bros. 

New Brunswick also scored 
in the second inning on a lead 
off single, a walk and a pair 
of groundouts but Burrows 
homered in the fourth in¬ 
ning. Randy Benn’s single 


was the only other Budget 
hit. 

Wilson, making his first ap^ 
pearance of the champion¬ 
ships, struck out eight. 

Budgets finished at 4-0 
while Nova Scotia was second 
at 3-1. Fredericton third at 2-2 
and Newfoundland fourth at 
1-3. Northwest Territories 
and Fort McMurray, Alta, 
tied with Newfoundland but 


Chris breezes to win 


NEW YORK (AP) — D* 
fending champion Chris 
Evert was back and having 
little trouble on the new fast 
court of the United States 
Open tennis championships 
Friday night as she beat fel¬ 
low American Donna Ganz 
6-0. 6 4 in a second round 
match 

Rejean Genois of Quebec 
showed Wednesday’s 7-6, 6-2 
upset of lOth-seeded Ameri¬ 
can Sandy Mayer wasn’t a 
tine-shot event as he followed 
up with a 6-2. 6 3 second- 
round victory against Alvaro 
Botancur of Colombia. 

in another night match, 



Chris Evert 


second-seeded Jimmy Con¬ 
nors made quick work of 
Steve Docherty of Australia 
•-1,6-3, and then he rushed off 
court, adhering to his policy 
of avoiding all interviews 
during this tournament. 

In defy matches, Guillermo 
Vilas and Roscoe Tanner won 
the first real spell-binders of 
the Open, and Martina 
Navratilova, Virginia Wade 
and Tracy Austin won their 
second-round matches 
easily. 

Vilas, the defending cham¬ 
pion, won a skirmish against 
American Bill Scanlon 3-7, 6 
4, 6-3. 

And In an match of rocket¬ 
ing serves and thrashing vol¬ 
leys, llth-seeded Tanner beat 
Victor Pecci of Paraguay 5-7, 
6-4, 6-3. 

There were no fireworks, 
just business as usual as top- 
seeded Navratilova pounded 
Gail Lovera of France 6-1, 
6 - 1 . 

Wade dispatched South 
African Brigitte Cuypers 6-0, 
6-1. No. 5 seed Austin, 15, 
eliminated Australian Chris 
O’Neil 6-3, 6-0. 

Meanwhile, No. 9 Manuel 
Orantes, the Spaniard who 
won the Open in 1975, retired 
from his first-round match 
with an injured knee. Italian 
Adriano Panatta was leading 
4-1 when Orantes walked to 
the net. extended his hand 
and left the court. 


Tenth-seeded Mima Jauso- 
vec of Yugoslavia was an¬ 
other casualty, the first of the 
seeded women to fall, retir¬ 


ing in the second set with an 
injured wrist. Renata To- 
manova of Czechoslovakia 
advanced, 6-2, 4-2. 


Manitoba trips B.C. 


* VANCOUVER (CP) - 
Manitoba defeated defending 
champion British Columbia 
2-1 as the Canadian women’s 
field hockey championships 
began Friday amidst wind 
and rain. 

Traditionally a strong 
team, B.C. was playing with¬ 
out several regulars who are 
with the Canadian team. 
Their places were filled by 
junior players. 

The defending champions 
rebounded later in the day to 


blank Newfoundland 6-0. 
Newfoundland also lost 7-1 to 
New Brunswick, which tied 
its match with Nova Scotia * 
1 - 1 . 

Ontario won both its 
games, 3-1 over Prince Ed¬ 
ward Island and 2-0 over Que¬ 
bec. Alberta also was a dou¬ 
ble winner with 2-0 wins over 
P.E.I. and Saskatchewan. 
Quebec won its match with 
Saskatchewan 5-0. 

Play continues through 
Monday. 


Track official decked 


PRAGUE (AFP) — Geoff 
Capes of Britain, former Eu¬ 
ropean shot put record 
holder, was disqualified Fri¬ 
day from the event at the 
European track and field 
championships after he was 
involved in a scuffle with a 
Czechoslovakian official. 

His disqualification 
sparked a protest walk-off in 
wmpathv h\ niher shot put 
competitors. But they even¬ 
tually returned after officials 
said they would cancel the 
event. 


The incident happened at 
the roll call for the competi¬ 
tors. 

Capes, a 6 foot 5 police¬ 
man. was wearing only one 
identification number. The 
rules state an athlete must 
wear two. 

An official tried to pin a 
second number on Capes and. 
in the ensuing scuffle, one of 
the officials was knocked to 
the ground. 

Capes was immediately or¬ 
dered off the field. 


lost out in runs-for-and- 
against. 

Winnipeg tied Newmarket 
with a 3-1 record but gained 
first place in the Red Division 
for winning the game be¬ 
tween the clubs, and Saska¬ 
toon tied with Quebec City, 
Charlottetown and Saint John 
but Saskatoon took third 
place and Quebec City fourth 
on the runs-for-and-against 
formula. 

The top four clubs in each 
division advanced to the play¬ 
offs but the (bird and fourth 
place teams are eliminated 
after one loss while the first 
and second place teams are 
not eliminated until suffering 
a second loss. 

The playoffs opened Friday 
evening and Saskatoon eli¬ 
minated Newfoundland by a 
4-0 score while Quebec City 
knocked off Fredericton 5-1. 

Saskatoon and Quebec City 
will play this evening against 
the losers of the games in¬ 
volving the first and second 
place teams. 

Saskatoon, a finalist last 
year, was forced to travel to 
the championships by bus be¬ 
cause of the Air Canada 
strike, The chib lost its first 
two games but appeared to 
have regained peak form Fri¬ 
day with a 9-0 triumph over 
Quebec in its final prelimin¬ 
ary game. Mound ace Gene 
McWiHie struck out 14, 
walked one and allowed two 
hits. 

Newmarket also looked im¬ 
pressive in its final game, 
pounding out 13 hits in a 13-3 
win over Saint John. 


New Brunswick 010 000 0-1 3 2 
Victoria 010 000 x-2 3 0 

Gerald Pulton and Sonny Phillips. 
Dave Wilson 1-0 and AkJen Govtnlock 
Home run: Victoria—BoD Burrows 
(2nd) 


BLUE DIVISION 

Victoria 
Nova Scotia 
New Brunswick 
Newfoundland 
Alberta 
Territories 

RED DIVISION 

Manitoba 

Ontario 

Saskatchewan 


P.E.t. 

Yukon 


Parker named best 
of quarter century 


WINNIPEG (CP) — Old Spaghetti 
Legs, Jackie Parker, one of the Cana¬ 
dian Football League’s most versatile 
athletes, was selected Friday as the 
CFL’s most outstanding player of the 
/past quarter century. 

A panel of 16 veteran reporters from 
the nine CFL cities selected Parker over 
19 other past winners of the Schenley 
Most Outstanding Player Award. 

The panel easily reduced the 20 to six 
serious contenders—Sam Etcheverry, 
Hal Patterson. Russ Jackson, George 
Reed, Ron Lancaster and Parker. 

One of the voters, Winnipeg Tribune 
sports editor Jack Matheson. said the 
final decision wasn't that difficult to 
make , 

“A lot of us knew before we got here 
who it should be. We had all the statis¬ 
tics and that but we had to point out to 
some the intangibles ... the leadership 
qualities of the guy. He pulled a lot of 
games out of the bucket for Edmon¬ 
ton .. . he had a great flair for 
the dramatic.** 

Besides his “flair for the dramatic" 
and his tremendous athletic ability, 
Parker was, above all else, a win¬ 
ner. 

A New Year’s Day baby in 1932, 
Parker was the catalyst for some of 
Edmonton Eskimos’, and the CFL’s, 
most exciting victories. None perhaps 
more so than the 1954 Grey Cup. 

Parker will be forever famous for 



picking up the Chuck Hunsinger fumble 
in the dying moments and outracing 
several Montreal Allouettes 95 yards to 
a touchdown. That tied the game and 
a convert gave Edmonton its first ever 
Grey Cup win. 

Parker led the Eskimos to three con¬ 
secutive Grey Cup wins before they 
were finally beaten in the west in 1957 

Parker is one of only two players to be 
named the CFL’s most valuable player 
three times, winning in 1957, 1958 and 
1960 _ 

•During 13 seasons in the CFL, he did It 
all: he ran, passed, caught and kicked 
the ball. He played offence and de¬ 
fence. 

He won the Jeff Nicklin Memorial 
Trophy as the most valuable player in 
the west seven times, six coming in 
successive years from 1956 through 
1961. He won the award four times as a 
quarterback and three times as a run¬ 
ning back. 

* He was the west’s leading scorer in 
1959 and 1961 and an all-star every year 
from 1954 through 1961—five years as a 
quarterback and three years as half¬ 
back. 

He played nine years with Edmonton 
(1954-62), three with Toronto Argonauts 
(1963-65) and retired as a player in 1966 
and 1967 but returned as player-coach of 
British Columbia Lions in 1968. 

When he finally retired for good, 
Parker was the CFL’s all time leading 
scorer with 750 points and his 88 touch 
downs were second only to Dick Shatto’s 
record of 91. Since then, George Reed 
has passed both of them in much 
downs and Dave Cutler has become the 
leading scorer. 

Parker’s 88 touchdowns stand as an 
Edmonton record and his 68 majors 
rushing is third only to Normie Kwong 
(78) and Johnny Bright (69) He shared 
the CFL record for field goals in a single 
game— 5— until It was broken by Cutler 
and. more recently. Bob Macoritti of 
Saskatchewan. 

When he played quarterback, Parker 
threw 2,061 passes and completed 1,089 
for 16,476 yards He rushed 854 times for 
5,210 yards, an impressive 6.1-yard 
average that tranks among the CFL's 
best. 

As the outstanding player of the quar¬ 
ter century, Parker will receive a vari¬ 
ety of awards and a trophy as well as 
have $1,000 in his name donated to the 
CFL Grey Cup dinner fund. 

The awards will be presented to him 
during half time of an Edmonton home 
game to be arranged this season. 


Major 

league 

leaders 


Oriole pitcher sets strikeout record 


C erew, Min 
Rice. Bos 
Oliver. Tex 
Pimella. NY 
Roberts. See 
Yount. Mil 
Reynolds, See 
Sinoleton. Bel 
Lynn. Bos 
Whitaker. Det 


AMERICAN LEAGUE 

' AB R M Ret. 

476 67 15» 334 
551 100 179 .325 
407 48 121 .314 

364 49 114 .313 

365 66 111 304 
386 50 116 .301 
435 46 130 799 
406 56 121 798 
440 64 131 298 
403 62 170 .298 


Fisk. Boston, 36; Brett. 
Kansas City 36; McRee. Kansas City, 

32 

Triples Rice, Boston, 15; Yount, 
Milwaukee. 8; Cowens. k ansas City. 8; 
(are*, Minnesota.8; Ford. Minnesota. 

8 . 

Home Rims: Rice, Boston. 36; Hi*!*, 
Milwaukee. 29; Thomas. Milwaukee. 

29. 

Rum Batted In: Rice, Boston. 114; 
Steub, Detroit. 104 
Stolen bases: Leflore, Detroit. 59. 
Crut. Seattle, 45. 

Pitthtne (12decisions) Guidry. New 
'York. 19-2. 90S. B Stanley. Boston. 

12-2. 857 

Strikeouts Guidry, New York. 307. 
Rven. Californio. 205 

' NATIONAL LEAGUE 

AB G H Ret 
Parker. PQh 462 73 145 314 

Burroughs. All 411 61 129 314 

Smith, LA 402 77 125 311 

Buckner, fhi 344 35 106 308 

MadtOCk, St 357 62 110 30« 

Clark. SF 484 76 149 JOT 

Bowa. Pha 522 62 159 305 

Whitfield. SF 399 62 121 .303 

Cruz, Hou 470 63 141 .300 

Rose, Cin 547 84 164 300 

Doubles: Rose,Cincinnati,42; Clerk. 
San Francisco. 37 

Triptes: Templeton, St Louis, 10; 
Richards. San Diago, 10; heandon. San 
Francisco. 9. 

Home Runs: Foster, Cincinnati. 31; 
Luzinskl, Phladetphia. 28. Smith, Los 

Angelas, 28 

Rena Betted In: Foster, Cincinnati, 
98; Gervev. Los Anoefes. 91 
Stolen Bases: Moreno. Pittsburgh, 
$4; Lopes. Los Angeles. 37. 

Pitching (11 decisions) Perry. Sen 
Diego. 15-6. .714; Blue. San Francisco. 
16-7, 696 

Strikeouts Richard, Houston, 244; 
P Niekro, Atlanta. 204 
(Includes Thursday games ) 


’Caps ace 
to Tulsa 


TULSA* Okla. (Reuter) - 
Alan Hinton of Britain was 
named Friday coach of Tulsa 
Roughnecks of the North 
American Soccer League. 

Hinton, who played for 
Vancouver Whitecaps la the 
NASL the last season, re¬ 
places American Alex Skn- 
tarek, who served as Interim 
coach of Tulsa after Bill 
Foulkes of Britain was fired 
last June 19. 

During a 17-year career in 
the English First Division 
with Derby County. Wolver¬ 
hampton and Nottingham 
Forest, Hinton. 38, played 
more than 500 games and 
scored over 100 goals. ■ 


Baltimore right-hander 
Sammy Stewart set a major 
league record for first-time 
starters Friday night, strik¬ 
ing out seven consecutive 
★ * * 
AMERICAN LEAGUE 

Chicago ooo ooo ooo- o 7 o 

Baltimore 002 100 OOx- 3 10 

stone 10-11 end Nahorodny, Palmer 
17 12. StanhouM (8) and Dempsey. HR 
Bat—Harlow, (6). 

Second 

Chicago 

Baltimore - . 

Baumgarten 2 2. Schueter (1). w«» 
loughbv (6). Hinton (8) and Colbern; 
Stewart 1 0, Kerrigan (6) end Skaog*. 
HRs Bel—Mev (21). Murray (26). 

Detroit 002 040 OOO- 6 9 0 

Kansas City 000 010 001- 2 9 1 

Billmgham 156 and May, Leonard 
15-16, Mingoorl (6). McGilberry (8) and 
. HR: Def-Ktmp (11). 


> 

- * - 

431 010 oak- 9112 


Cleveland 100 111 800- 4 7 0 

Minnesota 000 000 100- t 4 1 

Clyde69. kern (8), SdHHher (8) end 
Diaz; Eticksen 13-9 end Borgmenn 
HRs Cld-Dtez (2). Car bo (4) 

California ooo 300 030- 6 18 0 

Toronto 003 000 100— 4 9 1 

Hartzell 6-8. laRoche (8) and Down 
mo; Jeftorson; ti Cruz (8) anoAshbv 
HRs Cat-Bostock (4) R Jackson 
(4). 

Texas 004 ooo net - 5 to 0 

Milwaukee 100 001 011— 4 9 0 

Jenkins 13-8.Cleveland(9) andSund 
hero Sorensen 1510 and Martinez. 
Moore (8) HRs Tex-Harrah (7). 
Mil—Money* (12) 

Oakland 000 011 710- 5 12 2 

Boston 100 000 000- i 6 i 

Keouoh Hi, Lacey (71. Heaverlo (8> 
and Robinson. Lssien (7); Tiant 9 7. 
Burgmeter (6), Dr ago (7). Lee (7) and 
■Fisk. HRs Oak-Certy (26). Essian 
(3). 

Seattle 110 000 0)0- 3 9 0 

New York 000 000 000- 0 4 0 

Mitchell 7-13 and Plummer; Hunter 
9 5, Clev (9) end Munson 

NATIONAL LEAGUE 

Montreal 000 200 000 001- 3 9 0 

San Diego 0)0 001 000 000- 2 6 2 

Gnmsley, Garmon 36 (11) end 
Carter; Jones 11-17end ROberts. 

Philadelphia 000 200 100- > 6 0 

San Francisco 003 000 01X- 4 7 1 

Carlton 12-12 and Me Carver: Barr, 
Lavalle 11-9 (8) and Hill. HRs: Pha- 
Luzmski (29); SF-Evans 06), Clark 
( 22 ). 

New York 000 300 000 000- 3 9 1 

Los Angeles 000 100 011 001- 4 12 0 

Koosmen. Kobel 2 5 (12) and 

Stearns. Rau. Hough (9), Forster 56 
(10) end Ferguson, Yeager (10) 

Houston 060 300 110-11 15 1 

Chicago 511 112 12*—14 H ) 

Richard. Bannister (4), Sembito4-7 
(6), Dixon (7). Andutar (I) and Bochv; 
Krukow, Roberts (2), Moore (2). 
McGlothen UL Hemondn 1-2 (6). Sut¬ 
ter <7) end Rader. >Tectrwell (7), Co* 
(9). HRs Hou—Bochv (23; CM— 

Murcer (I), Trillo (4), Rada (3), 
r (3). 


Cincinnati 200 020 001- 5 10 0 

St Louts 100 000 001- 2 71 

Moskau 46, Bakr (9) and Bench; 
Denny 11-9, Schultz (9) end Simmons. 
NR: SIL—Simmons (19). 


Chicago batters to highlight 
the Orioles’ 9-3 rout of the 
White Sox in the second game 
of an American League base¬ 
ball doubleheader. 

Jim Palmer won the opener 
for the Orioles, 3-0, with relief 
help from Don Stanhouse, bql 
that was overshadowed by 
the 23-year-old Stewart who 
was promoted recently from 
Rochester of the lntemation- 

Stewart struggled in the 
first inning, making an error 
and a wild pitch. Then he 
struck out the next seven bat 
ten before Mike Squires flied 
out for the second out of the 
fourth. 

The record of six had been 
shared by Karl Spooner of the 
1954 Brooklyn Dodgers and 
Pete Richert of the 1962 Los 
Angeles Dodgers. 

Stewart collected nine 
strikeouts in his 5 13 innings 
and was relieved by Joe Ker 


rigan after a two-run single 
by Ron Blomberg. 

Homers by Eddie Murray 
and Lee May helped the Ori¬ 
oles build a -7-0-lead behind 
Stewart before the rookie got 
into trouble. 

Baltimore won the first 
game on a two-run homer by 

♦ * * 

NATIONAL LEAGUE 
Eai» 


Larry Harlow and a run-scor 
ing single by Terry Crowley. 
Kerrigan recorded his 19th 


save of the year in preserving 
the triumph for Palmer, 17- 

12 . 


r^SAT., SEPT. 2 
ISLAND SERIES 



w 

L 

Pet 

*BL 

Philadelphia 

7T 

60 

542 

Pittsburgh 

68 

64 

.515 

3 i 

Chicago 

67 

65 

508 

4'i 

Montreal 

62 

73 

.459 

f 

St. Louis 

58 

76 

.433 

14 | 

New York 

53 

•0 

J98 

19 


West 




Los AngeiM 

80 

54 

.597 

_ 

San Francisco 

78 

56 

582 

2 

Cincinnati 

73 

61 

.545 

7 

San Diego 

70 

66 

.523 

11 

Houston 

6? 

71 

466 

17' 5 

Atlanta 

59 

75 

440 

21 


VICTORIA AND DISTRICT GIRLS’ 
SOCCER ASSOCIATION < 

Taam Registration Deadline: September 16th 
AGE GROUPS: Senior 

18 Yre. end Under 
16 Yre. end Under 
14 Yre. end Under 
12 Yre. end Under 
10 Yre. end Under (Mini-Soccer) 
Information: Please contact Mrs. Pat Smith, 385- 
5023 or Mr. Ray Hitchin, 656-2144 


AMERICAN LEAGUE 
East 


Additional sport 
P. 7* 11 and 16 



W 

L 

Pet. 

GBL 

Boston 

84 

49 

632 

— 

New York 

77 

55 

583 

6 i 

r.viwaukee 

76 

58 

567 

8' i 

Detroit 

74 

59 

556 

10 

Baltimore 

74 

60 

552 

10 i 

C levelend 

58 

75 

436 

26' a 

Toronto 

55 

81 

.404 

30 m 


Wesi 




x ansas City 

71 

61 

538 

— 

California 

71 

63 

530 

1 

Te*as 

66 

65 

504 

4i 

Oakland 

63 

7? 

467 

*vS 

Minnesota 

58 

76 

433 

14 

Chicago 

56 

77 

421 

15' ? 

Seattle 

50 

8? 

379 

21 


HORSE RACING 
AT ITS BEST! 

Sandown Harnesa Raceway 

McDonald Perk Rd. end Qlemorgen Rd. 

(Juat West of Sidney) 


Victoria Dolphins 

JR. FOOTBALL 


MON., SEPT. 4th 

. 2 P.M. 

Victoria Dolphin* 

VB 

Vancouver Meralomas 

Royal Athletic Park 



RACES 

★ TROPHY 
DASHES 

* HEAT RACES 

4- MECHANIC S 
RACE 

★ 35-LAP 

earn open e p.m. FEATURE 



TUNE TRIALS 7 P.M. _ . __ 
RACINO ACTION t P.M. RACE 


Adults J.25 


Students and 0JLP. 
Children 1-12 125 


WESTERN 


4 TH£ ACTION” 


SPEEDWAY 


I 
I 

. \ 

t. 175 | 

IWAY I 



MON., SEPT. 4 

DEMO DERBY RACES 

OVIR 60 CARS EXPECTED 


_, - 3 71 

Pittsburgh 002 030 30*- • 111 

Niekro 1615, 5kok (7)’end Nolen. 
Benedict (6); D RoMoeon 11-5, Jack- 
son (7), Tekulve (7) end Oft. HRs 
All—Murphy (20); Pgh-Sleroell 
( 21 ). 


Atlanta 000 000 000- 0 3 0 

Pittsburgh 000 003 00*- 3 7 1 

Mahler 4 10, Cemo (6), Campbell (!) 
end Benedict, Nolen 17); Kiwi 5-5. 
Tekulve (I) end Dyer NR: Pgh- 
Berr* (3) 


t of Seeing for 1676 at t io d ow. 

i In Cleverdeie on October 16th. 

POST TIME LABOUR DAY (Sept. 4) 5 P.M. 

WEMU0AY. StPT. STM at 6 P.M.. 

FfltDAY. SOT ITM I* SATURMY. SOT STH at 1:» P.M. 
For more information caH Sandown el 
666-1631 or 686-8623 

For Bua Information call Vancouver 
Island Coach Unas at 385-4411. 



<«R sr 

CSA8N1N6 ACTION 3 P.M. 


• TMRff 


Minin • HEAT RACES 
BASKS • PQflfKI rm RACES 


MAM mSITS — HAVE TO NIT TO PASS 

MaRi SUI SWUM* mi 6AP. SL7I Ctttea til S1JS 

WESTERN 8%" SPEEDWAY 

TTNs program rated "Q" tor Family Vlowing 


VIC TORI A-ESQUI MALT MfNOR 
HOCKEY ASSOCIATION 

IMPORTANT 

INFORMATION 

As a result of the amalgamation of the former VICTORIA 

& ESQUIMAU ASSOCIATIONS the following benefits 

ara available to players and parents 

• Loweet registration feet In Greater Victoria — 64S 
(Family plan tor 3 or more registrations — $100) 

• Canadian Amateur Hockey Association approved 
BEGINNERS PROGRAMME (Ages 5-8) - $29 

•' Free team pictures for all players 

• Free ’ mini-hockey school ' put on by professional in¬ 
structors 

• Increased funding revenues 

• Increased exposure for sponsors 

• Association bus for team travel at no cost to parents or 
players 

• increased ice availability for teams 

• Stronger House (recreational) and Rep Programmes 


REGISTRATIONS held SETT. 9-10 A M -2 P.M. ind 
SEPT. 13 — 6:306:30 P.M. at both the VICTORIA 
MEMORIAL ARENA and the ESQUIMAU REC CENTRE 
(Pool) 527 Fraser St. , 

NOTE: Arwjrimr i 
carded Rep 


_ played House or 

hochgy In glthgr .th# 


Victoria or Epquimalt Associations 

« season, la eligible to play carried 
or Houae hookey In tne Victoria- 


■equlmett M.H.A. 


JR. B. TRAINING CAMP: SEPT. 11-15 
6-9 P.M. E8QUIMALT ARENA 


HOCKEY EQUIPMENT SWAP AND BUY 
- SEPT. 10-10 A.M.-4 P.M. 

Buy. Ball or trade used hockey gear at the 
ESQUIMALT CURLING RINK 


For further information phone 


335-3119, 332-9553 or 


n phi 

388- 


7835 


W 


















































V 


Horses , pilots walk away 
from tiackstretch pileup 


BY JIM TANG 

SUndardbreds a re said to 
bt* considerably tougher than 
l he thoroughbreds, and the 
i '>92 fans at Sandown Friday 
night-will buy that after wii- 
nrssing a spectacular back 
stretch crash in the fifth 
race. 

It happened Just after the 
field had straightened out for 
the backstretch run. and 
fi om the stands It appeared 
that Ocala Dutch, being pit 
oied by Bob Wallace, broke 
ride and was run over by 
VS ee General Fuzz, which had 
DuWayne Guest in the sulky. 

Both horses went down 
w ith the drivers being thrown 
out of their seats, and it didn't 
seem possible that there 
wouldn’t be at least one seri¬ 
ous Injury although the crash 
involved the trailers. But 
(•uest and Wallace, it was 
reported^ received nothing 
*orse tOfui a shaking up and 
both horses feU-.the track 
under their own power. They 
may miss the final five days 
of the Sandown meeting but 
(he word was that they will 
race again. 

The race was won by Dun 
line, the 10-year-old gelding 
apparently liking the wet 
racing surface and staying on 
(he front end to beat T.V. 
Pilot across the finish line 
The sloppy surface also 
suited Rays Golden Patch, 
which had shown little since 
Mime early Sandown success, 
and the lightly-race Maple 
Hills Todd, starting for only 
the third time at Sandown. 

An eight-year-old gelding 
owned by Roger Provencher 
of Surrey. Rays Golden Patch 
started ita Sandown cam 
palgn with a win and had two 
place and two show finishes 
in the next four starts. But in 
the last four starts there was 
nothing close to success, and 
the 9-1 Friday odds were 
earned. But Rays Golden 
i «Tcn ifii inr rrM nr ormna 


in the stretch to set up the 
biggest Exactor of the night. 

_ It paid 6330.60, and helping 
making it juicy was a dis 
qualification. Judges looked 
at the film after an objection 
had been made, ruled that 
favored Taiga had caused In 
terference at the three-quar 
ter pole and moved Marcel 
Bouvier's gelding from sec 
ond to third, giving place 
money and a place in the 
Exactor to the 17*1 Cfls Do¬ 
minion. 

Maple Hills Todd, last and 
third in previous appear¬ 
ances, held on in the stretch 
to beat out Mel J. Victor, a 
recent arrival from Calgary. 
And Hazels Yankee, coming 
from behind to score an 
eighth Sandown win, looked 
impressive beating Nechako 
Prince to the wire by about a 
neck in the featured seventh 
race. 

FI nST ACi - UN 1 mite p«ce A t r©» 


eighth rack - tm,) 


1 mite a 
erica tt 


VdpteHlUjTodd (tech) 13 * 7 90 * 30 
ted j. Victor (G Hoiwth) 5 20 4.00 
Shady Hill Sam (Armstrong) 4 10 
Tima 3:13 Exactor (3-4) *77.31 
Adios Tea tearal. Lord O Lynch. 
Karrob Gift, Sodate. Got To la also 
ran. 

Atiandonco 10*3 Mutual hand tat 71. 

m 


Entries 


Fast Tima 13* a m 
FIR1T—teOO.clatmme.antmite Mca 


Coma Sac* Du* 
Dus tvs tombar 
Bankart Chip 
Klinkar Jim 
SSVBNTM 


1 1 oar Adi os 
Bald Scott 
Roger Tac 
Hotline Anma 
Four Score 
tecpvHo 
Dominion Duka 
Shady Hill Sam 
Also eligible 
Avalon Don 
Lmda Ouiii 


D Jungouist 
K. Linton 
R Gemmill 

8 Boyd 


G M'worth 
J Rankin 
R. Gemmill 
J. teoRoric k 
C. Sibiea 
te. Evans 
S Crimen 
C 


L Fitre 
G Tonkin 


Saliva Sister 
Spiders Fnda 
Sherky The Great 
teokoN 
No Dill 
Leytrue 
RvthmC 
Billy Adios 

SECOND - t*e*. a 
Nechako Taana 
Hoir.dga DDu# 


Alva eligible Facers — Claiming - 
Clatmma Fnca $1,301 plat allowances 
(Nan winners ten meet with at teas! 
eiaht starts at teis meet ) 

Ruby Khan (Astg) U » 4.30 2*0 
Sanoa Silas IDrydon) 5 10 3.40 

Bronlosaurua (Drquhart) 2.70 

Time 3:14 1/S. Enactor (I 4 7) 

•41 at 

Clover tearzv. Stone Flower. Steadv 
Ace. Wallace Crooks. Nobte 

also ran.- 

SECOND RACE - M00 1 mite MC« 

- Ctatmmt Frtca si .SON 


Shadows N How 
Annies Rebel 
Art* Choice 
l ask ah Gold 
Coll N Raisa 

THIRD—*404 clatmma. 
and tret. 

Bethel Champ 
tear Con Honev 
Irish 

tealson N 
Ad-os Lorono 
Timber Bill 
Tiger Paw Khan 
Hotridge Dakota 
fourth- seat, 
pace. 

Stopwatch 


L Me Dote 
D umgouis* 
G Tonkin 
T Burke 
D. Ball 
te teitliteire 
C Gagnon 


w Urquhart 
te tvom 
D jungouist 
□ Ferguaon 
B Wallace 
J. teahorkh 
j. Rankin 
J. 


eighth - site Claiming, aim mitt 


L. Clark 
D Ferguson 
G. Tonkin 
R Graham 
j. Rankin 
t. Armstrong 
O Guest 
J Rankin 


tetQK Dabbar 
Dobbie Joe 
irtsh Beth tecCal 
Fraina Bandit 
Baron Romero 
Mikes Dominion 
Callaghan 
BC Arden 
NINTH -41,404, 


f Nick 
Dark Phantom 
Dusty Tex 
Deacon Brodm 
Sandy Pick 
Trevgr John 
Combat Lands 
TENTH —1400, a* 
moI ridge Bob 
Andys Adam 
Melody Wave 
Maote Hills Shetbv 
Bay Comet 
Hal R Flying 
Mark Doc 


K Arsenault 

K Linton 
L Clark 
C Gagnon 
M Bouviec 
j. Rankin 

te Evans 


Atsoatiotbte 
Ringing Time 
Hotridge Due has* 


J teohorich 
te Evans 
D Junggulst 
W urquhart 
te tecCaltum 
J. Rankm 
G. H’worth 


O Jungouist 
G Tonkin 
J. Burke 
C. Gagnon 

F. Hodson 
D Bell 
te McCallum 


ttr. 


last si* starts whe are winners ever 
%m last six starts Atsa eligible Tret 

Captain ucodv N (E vs) ,4 *0 3 70 3.70 
Spunkey Dale (Jgoust) 510 4 30 
Tiddler Mac (urouhert) 4.20 

- -(3 4 2)!- 


Tima 3: IS. Exactor (3 




Sport 

today 

GOLF 

9:30 a m. — Slart of 
opening round of Metro 
I vyota-CFAX Opel, final 
foursome off at 1:15 p m.. 
Cedar Hill Oolf Club. 

H ARNESS RACING 

1:25 p.m. — Parade ta 
post, Sandown Park. 

CRICKET 

1:30 p.m. — District As¬ 
sociation. Knockout Cap 
semi-finals: Incogs vs. 
Oak Bay. St. Michael * 
University School: Cast¬ 
aways vs. Albion. Beacon 
Hill Park. 

AUTO RACING 

7 p.m. — Time trials for 
slock car and mechanics 
races. Western Speed¬ 
way. 


brook Barry, Valiev Jtm. Ivans Lucky 
Girt atao ran 

THIRD RAC8 — MM, 1 eMteetce — 
Ciatnitng—Qptmtm FncatiJOpko 
aiiawoncaa (Winners at $4te *r aver 

lest six starts ) 

Dons Florico (S Ercn) 14.31 3 M 4 10 
- Mr. Mmo (Linton) 1.20 100 

Wharmtn Dusty (Hudant 3 70 

^Time 3:15 Exactor (4 4 1) 445 *0. 
Stop Watch. Sir Bob Wevnes Buddy. 
Halcyon Harmony, tear* Dominion 
also an. 

Al's Dominion scratched 

FOURTH RACK - MM. 1 NtRaRNCa 
, dllmtni Hawtlrg — CtdpNm 
Prices 41,Tte ta 43414 plus allaw 

RmCatdanFateh <T*> 3141 « 74 444 
Cal'* Dominion (Ranklni 35.31 * 40 
Taiga (Bouvier) 3.34 

Tima 3:14 2/5 Exactor (4 4 # J) 
S330M 

Sanoa Noie. Willi* T'Knight Glen 
Crooks. Meadow Bay, tetss Raian also 
ran. 

FIFTH RACE - 5701, 1 mite pace - 
Clatmma — Clatmma Frtca 52,444 ate* 


_ t Hilla tetsa 
Lannies Choice 
Bay Mark 
Fine Spook 
Sanga Kav 

fifth saaa • 
Rockford Ann 
Khan Hit 
Expresso Coffee 
B C Classy 
Shadow* Rival 
GiisCaunsei 
Yankee Mate 


O Jungouist 
J Nudon 

l pure 
D. Guest 
C.Stbipa 
T Burke 

J. Rankin 


K MacDonald 
J Hudon 

C Gaonon 
D Ferguaote 
w urquhart 

K. * 


P Lundy 


ISTORM*^ 
WINDOWS 

iHprem intalitiw mB uvts yn 

•nwy iM https N kt* 


m 

K. MacDonald 
J Hudon 


M: 0»«| Imtnr. (62-3901 

or In. 652-27(1 

NO OBLIGATION 

Man Building Predate 


Dunhoe (Arms!) 7 *4 < 44 3 19 

T V. Pilot (Burke) 3 34 3 44 

Merc Kimberly (McOoie) 4 40 

Tima 2:12 1/S. Exactor (2 i 1) 
431 70 

Andys Buoer, Nechako Chris, Paul 
Bruiser also ran. 

wee General Fun and Ocala Dutch 

did not finish 

SIXTH RACK - 5740. 1 ntete pace — 


Andys Lester (McOolt) 7.SB 7 *4 3.44 
Andys Wavna (Hudon) 3 10 2 ND 
Right Proud (J Gagnon) 4 54 

Tima 2 13 Exactor (4 A 4) 421 40 
Sanga Scarlett, Bitty Brooke also 
ran. 

Monterey Brook. B C Flyer. Dusty* 
Norman scratched 

SEVENTH RACK - 51,144, 1 mite 


Hazels Yankee (Boyd) 7.44 3 TV 2 *4 
Nechako Prince (Mrch) 5.00 2 *0 
Dusty Sneedhall (Linton) 2 SO 

Time 2:11 2/S. Exactor |1 4 5) 
444 40 

Enel B Mac. Pecan Bill. Sanga Lew 
noc also ran. 



Wendy gains 
tennis finals 

TORONTO (CP) - Un 
seeded Wendy Barlow' of Vic- 
toria advanced fo the 
women's singles final of the 
Canadian junior internation¬ 
al tennis tournament Friday 
u ith a 6-3. 6-2 win over Lucia 
Fernandez of the United 
States. 

In the other women's semi- 
fmal, second-seeded Ava 
Pfaff of West Germany beat 
No. 3 seed Mary Lou Piatek 
of the U.S. 6-2, 6-J. ’ 
Fernandez and Piatek de¬ 
feated Cathy Drury and 
Joanna Drurie of Britain 2-6. 
b 3. 6 3 in women's doublet 
semi-finals and Caryn Cope¬ 
land and Sue Rasmussen of 
the U.S. beat Christianne Jo- 
lissairit and Isabelle Villiger 
of Switzerland 6-3, 34, 7-5. 

L'nseeded Marco Ostoya of 
^ ugoslavia upset sixth&eed- 
ed Blaine Willenborg of the 
I S. 14. 74. 6-3 in men’s sin 
gles semi-finals, while No. 1 
seed Per Hjertquist of Swe¬ 
den ousted No. 3 Steffan Sl- 
mOnsson of Sweden 6-0, 5-7, 
6 1 . 






^1 


END OF SUMMER SALE 


CLOTHING 

DOWN JACKETS and VESTS MM/ 

UP TO . 33 /• m 


HOIS KNICKERS 
Rag to 924.66 NOW 

WOOL and CORO 
KNICKERS. 


FT SEA ANORAKS 
Rob. 634.90. NOW 


Roq. 627.99. NOW . 

WOOL BLEND 
JAC 9MIRTS. 


* 19 " 

20% on 

* 27 " 

...... * 5 " 

.* 19 " 


PURE WOOL SHIRTS 


Rag. 920.00 


* 15 " 

*2"m 


SWEATERS UP TO 80% OFF 
UVtc THERMOFLOATS 
JACKETS. LMt 611 B OO 

NOW .. v . 


*79" 


ALL 

AND 


COMPASSES 20% m 

10% m 
*60°° 


CLIMBING ROPES 
ANO HARDWARE . 

CLIMBING BOOTS 
ME INOL full steel shank 
Rag. S110.00. NOW .... 


60499 VASOUE A9CENOER i SCAN 

LL Rag. 964.00. NOW. hJU 


E ^s ABC Recreational 


Equipment 

564 YATES ST. 384-6522 

VISIT OUR NEW STORE AT OUR OLD LOCATION 

Down ftltedgam. beckpectw, XC eking. enowa h oaa, guaHty tents I boot* 


Open 
till 
9 p.m, 
FrL 


ROBUST • SAUCY • RELIABLE • LONG-LASTING 


HUSKY 32 * 38 


taw often. For pruning. For 
For clean 


(QjHusqvarna 

Husky 32 — the new hobt 

mands, who went to use a_ . 

cutting firewood. For building. For telling tree* For clearing 
The mw for you it the new Husky 32. The'robust, Mucy, 
reliable end long-lasting hobby mw. 

HUSKY 32 *180“ 14" MADE 

HUSKY 38 ’249" 14” MADE 

ALF BECKER’S CHAIN SAWS 2981 



Prioe includes woodcutter* kit wtth filet, 
file sharpening gauge*, filing wedge, 
grease gun. bar cover, funnel, 
screwdriver, spark plug and bar wrench. 

TILLICUM 384-6414 


DAILY COLONIST. Victor)*. B C . S*tur4*y. September 2. 187S 15 


P0RASUTHE 
AS 35 s8 OUR 
14 POINTTUNE UP 

ISMUSKT 

TO YOUR EARS. 


* 



14 Point Tune-up 


4 CYLINDER 


6 CYLINDER 


8 CYLINDER 


3P 39» 48 s8 


Prices quoted are for parts and labour Resistor plugs extra Air conditioned cars extra. 


Hert’i what we do: 

1 Initial ignition system 
analysis 

2 Test & clean battery, cables 
and hold down. 

3 Supply & install new spark 


plugs. 

Supply 


/Supply S install new points 
and condenser 


5 Perform cylinder balance 
test. 

6 Check rotor. 

7 Check H. T. wiring, distrib 
utor cap. coil, primary circuit. 

§ Check and adjust timing. 

9 Check P C V operation. 


10 Check and lubricate heat 
riser valve. 

11 Check & adjust idle mixture. 

12 Check fuel pump and filter 
for proper operation. 

13 Check air cleaner element 

14 Final ignition system 
analysis. 


IS YOUR CAR’S TIMING CHEATING YOU OF MILEAGE? 

A TANK FULL OF ESSO EXTRA PREMIUM UNLEADED WITH THIS TUNE-UP'S TIMING CHECK ANO RESET WILL TELL YOU. 

(GAS EXTRA). 

Atlas Shock Absorber Special 


STANDARD 


HEAVY DUTY 



56 Pt. Car Care Inspection 


Our mechanics will check the 
areas in your car vital to trouble- 
free driving and give you a* 
written report plus an estimate 
for any necessary repairs. 




Our Car Care Inspection is by 
appointment only. Phone today 
and be sure to ask your 
Checkpoint Service Dealer for 
details. 


Our dealers guarantee thei* work for 90 days or 4.000 mites. You pay no more than prices quoted, on 
most cars, for Checkpoint Service otters at participating Dealers. Put your purchase on your EssoCredit 
Card. Or. at most£sso stations, you can use your Visa or Master Charge Card. 

AVAILABLE ONLY WHERE YOU SEE THIS SIGN 


Checkpoint- 
Service 

Making service specials 
work for you. 

OFFERS EXPIRE SEPTEMBER 



Allis Motors Ltd. 

224 Cm* SI.. Vlclortt 
US-2514 


Causowoy Sonin Ltd. 

30SMMHMSI. 

383-38)2 


Glanford Esso Sonin 

4233 UlMlort Aw.. Wctwti 
4704414 


Bnntwood Auto Ltd. 

STUUMOmMOi. 
te SU-3021 


Cedar Hill Esso Sorvtn 

3927 BMIuot M . Vtaorti 
477-11)7 


Imperial Contro 

1700 Hllltl4* »**.. Vlctwli 
502 2455 


4U1 


4704715 


BumsMa Esso Sonin 
3oow. knee m. mm* 
3024331 


DanysCohnoodAoto. lid. 

214SSMttHMvlttvM4 

470-2431 


Lake Sonin 6ango 

Uk*C*wtckM 

7404)51 


University Nts. Esso 

la.iMwti 


Burnside Sonin Bongo 

2* ftnMM .Vtoirti 

'll 


Doom Esso Sorvtn 

5S32 Tran Cm4» Hw|., Dmnm 


Mayfair Esso Ssrvics 

3201 Dtafln ft.. Ytettria 
014 


m 


'*■ ' v * 




—'-WCW-A 







































































































16 DAILY COLONIST. Victoria. B.C.. Saturday. September 2, 1S7A 


Exhibition Park racing 


VANCOUVER — Results of 
Friday night's thoroughbred 
racing at Exhibition Park 
and entries for today: 

Pint—*2,4**, claiming. I yaar akto 
and ms 11M mart 

Ncyrftejds (Skinner) MW 5.70 4 9 
Rowe De Riveter OMIkimoni 5 80 4.1 . 
Latte Beau PM tCuMbcrttom 3 9 
lime 1:53 

Kmghtlv Gal, Nobhtll Lady; ShellaS Dia 
mood. VixenLes*. Tavwin. SheiievsPet 
also ran 


Second—$2.104. claiming S year 

adv *• 11 ^ - 


Miracle Love (Kravw) 27.10 u.» 4.10 
Star Lodoe (M. Mena) 7% “ 

“ wae% -■ 


Tec wee Was*> (Skmniri 
Time. 1:?14-S 
Dally Double $215.00 
MartinasGIrl. Sail Haoov. BudN Wendy. 
Azulll*. Castle image also ran 


Third—*3,7*0 claiming, 2 year otds. 

*•»• * 


Croout Mom. (Smrthl 10 50 SO* 4 20 
Crown Counsel (Carter) 4 40 3 50 
Jet A Bette (Krasnari 6 SO 

Time: 1:03-5 , r _ 

CastinGold, Donna Mac.ElkvJr.,Mutual 

faB»SU§' 04 "-e f «- 


Fourth—S3,300. claiming. 3 year 
elds. 11 M miles 


5 40 4 SO 

f« 6.50 
I) 1230 


Le Paoilllon (Williams) 12 
Dannvs Honey (Bray) 

Scamp's Wildfire (M i 
Time: I: SO 15 
Exactor: si 10 60 

Tanya Lynn, Mr North woods. Reformed 
Commander Jim, Hirod.SirCametot. Take 
The Monev also ran 

Fifth—S3.20t, claiming, 3 year olds 
and up, 6' i furlongs 

Melodv Maker (C’ten) 15 21 7» 5 30 
Citizera Award (Cuthbertson) 4 9 3.M) 
Sassie Driver (Stein) 5.00 

Time: 1:2) 

Frank Folo, Mr Bradley, Lucky Gary, 
Blue Maior. Beareck. Little Larder also 

ran 


Sixth—*3400. claiming. 3 v 
and up. 6* > furlongs 


Roman Fred 
Cool Artie (Cuthbertwn 
Cattish Kid (Williams) 

Dandy Lea (Creighton) 

Also eligible 
Bow Hunter (Carter) 

Ambling Sam (Wilkinson 
Woodland Shadow (Wilkinson) 
Malibu Star (Brownell) 

Second, *24**. clahntng l and 4 1 
aids. 1 !U antes 
Fleet Outing (Loseth) 

Pash Puter-fWotskii 
Miss Blue Nose 
Franshot (Williams) 

MacGreoor's Lad (Wilk'n) 

Kind's Prophecy (Arnotd) 

Moving Force (Stain) 

Ambling Art (Skinner > 

SecretGgmbtgr (Walker) 

Devil Darren (Brownell) 

Also eligible 

Chilenko Wind (tcresner) 

Third—$2,000, clatmm. 3 year 
6 1 - furlongs 
Iron Plains (Stein) 

Chief Constable iwtlk n) 

Comics Win (Creighton) 

Major Return (Arnold) 

Designate (Johnson) • 

Movie Director (Krasnen 
Lucky Canuck (Brownell) 

John Bear (Williams) 
Mactaouacfc (Walker) 

Second Command (Dtmorest) 


„ (CvBTn) 

Wild Rover (Loseth) 

F eerth 0,000. claiming, 3 yaar a 
and up. 6 ,J i furlongs 

Nib Bill (Smith) 

Circle The Wagon 
Panama Pete (Kresner) 

Poval Lord (Demorest) 

Man The Lights (Bray) 

Top Sport (Arnold) 

Akimpool (Creighton) 

Hacker (Williams) 

Lawdv Doc (Loseth) 

Magic Tartan (Walken 
Also eligible 
Frelach (Loseth) 

Fifth—*10,000, 2 year olds. 6> t I 

Bronze Duchess (Loseth) 

Economic Recovery (Skinner) 

Floatmg Power ^Kresner► 

Poouita (Walker) 
victory Round (Arnold) 

Chute Creek 

Totem Talk (Cuthbertson) 


M0 Mystical Power (Johnson) M4 

MS Loving Call (OemoresD M9 

1)0 Downtown Cat (Williams) M9 

HO Danskel Future (Stein) M9 

... sixth—iJJOO, claiming, S year aids 

and up. 0*»turtewps 

JJ Fiyabllttv 113 

Early Brume (Krasner) MS 

117 Partisipaction (Waikan 117 

yaar Ole Par (Wilkinson) M3 

LordOcco (Smith) .m3 

114 River of lea (Arnold) M6 

T d*i n) 


Our Bov Kirk (Johnson) 

Close Vote (Creighton) 

No Aryttimta (Skinner) 

Seventh—gild**-added 
3 veer olds and up. 1 116 mites 
Uvanka (Demorest) <oa 

Louise's Pride (Krasnen 117 

Pahca (WMim w ) M6 

Miss Streaker (Bray) 114 

snkv Steel (Gary Baze) '20 

Persian Goddam (M. Menu) 111 

Eighth mm added, allowance, 2 
year olds. 6W t urf lags 
Strike Aoam (Loseth) 

Holly OWv (Smith) 

Satisfied Lady (Arnold) 

Leavm (Dailev) 

Pertock (Cuthbertson) 

Canim Clipper 
C Leave (. 


Mr Prime Minister (Skmner) 12? 
Fiddle Five (Hhdge) 127 

Market Surge (Krasner) 12? 

Ninth—«i2,**4added, allowance. 3 
year old* and up, 1 V16 mitts 

Berta s Dandy (Kresner) ill 

Title Victory (Johnson) M6 

Gypsy Jewett 

Win A Share (Skinner) M3 

Sisslpaha (Hedge) 

Swinging Safari (Smith) M3 

Tenth—«3JN. claiming 1 voar aids 
and up, 1114 miles 

Worring Joe (Williams) 

Poval Truce (Carter) 

Split The Atom (Skinner) 

Cheetah Child (Daitev) 
jewel gf The West (Smith) * 

Northern Pilot (Creighton) 

Just Facts (Walker) 

HmtfCMct (Demorest) 

Potatouche (Wilkinson) 

Oh Really (Cuthbertson) 


SPRINGFIELD, III. (AP) 
— Sharon Milled of Marshall. 
Mich., and Pat Bradley of 
Westford. Mass.. led at the 
end of Friday's first round in 
the Rail Charity golf tourna 
ment with five under par 
scores of 67. 

Donna Caponi Young of Los 
Angeles birdied the IHth hole 
for a three-under-par 69 to 
lake third place in the Ladies 
Professional Golf Association 
event. 

Six players were tied at 
two-under par 70. including 
Nancy Lopez of Florida, the 
leading money-winner on this 
year's LPGA tour, and 


JoAtine Camer of Lakewood, 
Fla., who lost in a playoff 
here two years ago. 

Jocelyn Bourassa of 
Khawinigan. (Jue., had a 78 in 
the opening round, while Dale 
Shaw of Victoria shot an 80. 

There are three rounds left 
in the tournament which ends 
Monday. 



PEDOER BAY MARINA 


Metchosin —oft Rocky Point Rd. 


Class No. 1 
Ctaaa No. 2 
Claes No. 3 


600 3 9 290 
4 50 3 50 

32* 


let O' Times (Smith) 

Emores* Dee (Arnold) 

Prairie Scooter (Woiski) 

Time: 1 22 2-5 

Execter $25.70 

Comic Sue, Pax Princess Snow Quality 
also ran 


Seventtv—13,49*, claiming. 3 
>idv 6’ i ft 


Smokein Rose (Carter) 4 40 3 2* 2 5* 
AvedOe (Williams) 4 40 2.90 

Balsam Leaf (Krasner) 2 50 

Time: 1 22 15 

Marine Driver, Oft The Pace. Bench's 
Brother, Mahanm also ran. 


Eighth—$3,600. claiming. 3 year okh 
and up, 6’ j furlongs 

Pickle Pie (J Mena) a SO 410 2.10 
Ardmore (Woiski) 390 2 00 

Devon Sea (Skinner) 3 51 

Time 1.2245 

Exactor: $33 40 

(Pliant Dave, Ladtcahon, Pitt Meadows. 
Ole Cookie a No ran 




TOTAL POWER SKATING” 

THE OAK BAY WAY! 

10 1-HOUR SESSIONS 
DAILY SEPTEMBER 5th-14th INCLUSIVE 

INSTRUCTOR: PHIL BLAKE 

DAILY SCHEDULE 

(12 and under). 4:00*5:00 p.m. 

(13 and 14-yr.-olds) .5:10-0:10 p.m. 

(15 and over).4:20-7:2$ p.m. 

REGISTRATION FEE $20.00 
for further Information pleAae dial 595-SWIM *-20 

cxzk Bc^y rz«c Ttfxjdon c c^rJttze 



You deserve it. 

■ ■ . 


olds. 6‘ i fwrlongi 

T-jmpian's Tim (O'mr'st) 4 20 3 38 2J0 
■i Dyke (Williams) 6 00 3.50 


3 9 


vnM_ 

Pr.nce Gesture (Skinner) 

Time: 120 15 

Exacttr: $30 30 

EarlOf Bon,Nurse sBet.GotdGirl.Tasia 
Ertden, Captain Cognac also ran 


Tenth-$2.30* claiming. J year olds 
tmfcjp, 4 »furlongs 


reightoni 45 00 2 7 30 « 9 
* (Wilkmsoni 7 40 5 10 
450 


Port S'der (Cri 

i a Belie Lune.... 

°i-o**ro'ne (Walker) 

Time: 122 3 5 

Qumetla: $146 80 

Annie Alms, Win Bram. Green App*e Pie 
Maior s Dream Black Lila also ran 
Handle 5864 top 
Attendance 9,003 


Entries 

First—*2,.tt*. claiming. 3 year olds. 
4’ i furlongs: 

Perfect Monarch (Woteki) M5 

Chechacko (Loseth) IIS 

Sugar Kid (Cuthbertson) MS 

April Foolish (Brownell) 110 

Havmarado (Woiski) M7 

Lil Cedar (Demorest) MS 


Rogers sidelined 

MONTREAL (CP) - 
Righthander Steve Rogers, a 
mainstay on the staff of Mon¬ 
treal Expo* for the last sev¬ 
eral seasons, has been lost to 
the club for the remainder of 
this year's schedule with a 
bone chip in his right elbow , 
the National League baseball 
club armwunced Friday. 



Quality 
Bicycles 

e RUSS "lUY 

BICYCLE 
SHOP 

2542 Government 

8t. 

lot to Thraa P*kd M*t*n 
384-4722 
Opee Fri W 9 pjs. 



TRADE-INS WELCOME 



TIRE BTOREB 


GT RETREADS 


CCONOMVCARt 
•Hilt A 9«12 
•0x12 ATtxia 
•axis BTtxH 
•axis 


COMPACT CA MS 
700x18 C7»x13 
•41k 14 CM, 14 
•6*14 070x14 


IM9RMC01AT1 CAM 
19x14 
F7t*14 
FTtxll 


■tamoa no a a 

R 14 
t* 


STATION 

H7W14 


191 


!( 3 & 


21S£ 


(33 

5 



IM8TAUAT 

TIRE GUARANTEE 

For workmanship and Bra defect 




9-1 


3030 

NAN/UMO ST. 

Tin *0 Rattpea 
tf Tnd*r \ftc i 

386-3156 



Sears ] Saturday 

Sellouts! 

Shop Saturday, 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Personal Shopping Only, While Quantities Last 


Beautify your home 
with evergreens 
and flowering shrubs 



Your choice: 

Cedar Varieties. Blue Spruce. Norway 
Spruce. Rhododendrons, Camellias. 
Magnolia. Pampus Grass, Evergreens. 
>lant now! 1-gal. to 5-gal. 



Save 51% 

Garden Urn* 

Save *2.50 

Cedar baskets 

97* 

Reg. $1.99. White agricultural lime in 
40-lb. bag. Apply now for a healthy 
lawn in the spring! 

Garden Shop (71) 

I 97 

Reg. $4.49. Hanging style cedar 
basket in both square or rectangular 
shape Includes suspending wire 

Garden Shop (71) 

Save*1.50 

Alaska peat mots 

31 7 - 

Reg. $4.99. 2-cu -ft bale size Ideal 
for building up your garden soil 

Garden Shop (71) 

Save *1.22 

Barnyard poultry manure 

I 77 

Reg. $2.99. Processed poultry ma¬ 
nure in 33.3-tb bag Steer Manure. 
33.3-lb bag Reg. $1.99!.... $1.09 

Garden Shop (71) 

Save *2.50 

Mom Killer 

4,49 

TP *•« 

Reg. $6.99. 4-2-3. kills moss as it 
fertilizes lawn Save $5 on spreader. 
Holds 4-lb. of fertilizer 

Reg. $14.99 $9 97 

Garden Shop (71) 

Save *2-3 

Organo-Gro fertilizer 

3?7 

Reg. $5.99-6.99 Choose from 
4-10-10. 6-2-1. 12-4-8 50% * 
organic 40-lb bag 

Garden Shop (71) 


w 

Swing Set 
CLEARANCE 

25%off 


Fun 4-leg gym set 

Reg. $79.90. Includes slide abt 5 
long; 2 swings, glide-ride Sturdy 
2 steel tubing. 24551.. 


Super slide gym set 


59.97 


Big ‘T’ gym set 

Reg. $94.09. Set includes awing, 
trapeze bar. rope, gym rings, over¬ 
head ladder Must be set In con- WA Q7 
crete 2 only. 24552-1. ■ wew# m 

Plus many more unadvortiaod 

Toy Shop 


Reg. $104.99. Fun set includes 2 
swings, glide-ride and overhead 
slide Great Outdoor exercise! 6 
only. 24561.. 


77.97 


Tubular swing set 

Reg. $59.99. Sturdy. 2 tubular 
steel set includes 2 swings and 
glide-ride. Baked enamel finish Jk Jk A "9 
24533.. **•#i9f 

swing sats for outdoor fun! 

(49) 


Save *2" 

Save *4 50 -*7 

Save* 15 

Stock-up! 

Jean jacket 
by Toughskin® 

Boys’ GWG or 

Levi shirts 

Underwood ‘315’ 
typewriter 

Hllroy *500' 
refill paper 

299 

8 9 - 9 

84 9 f 

1“ 

Reg. $5.98. Chilean s rugged lean 
jacket made of polyester /cotton blend 
denim Navy. Brown with contrast 
stitching Snap front/cuffs 

Children a Wear (89) 

Reg. $13.49*15.99. Western style 
shirts, by GWQ or Levi. Gingham 
checks. 6nap or button front Made of 
polyester/cotton blend. Sizes: 8-18 

Soya Wear (40) 

■— e-*- -; — 

Reg. $99.99. Features full 88-character 
keyboard. 9V^ carriage; tab. margin 
aet. Automatic ribbon reverse. Carrying 
case incl. Great for students, at-home 
use! (40103). 

Buahwae Machines (3) 

Great for class notes! Lined refill loose- 
leaf paper In metric rule. 500 sheets per 
pkg Zee Tabs exercise books. 4 per 
pkg Reg. $1.49.. . pkg. 974 

School tuppttos (3) 


•Simpsons-Sears Ltd.- 


9100 Shelboup**# SL 'Beg.' and ‘Wee' refer te I 


i Beers Lid. 


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®be Hails Manist 


Section Two 


Saturday, September 2, 1978 


Page 17 


i 


TOYOTA 


ESSO CAR CLINIC 
TESTED USED CARS 



Govern meat policy target of placards 


—Colonial oho»o Sv Ian McKam 


Workers protest layoffs 


.Hit by one layoff and facing others as a result of 
federal spending cuts, construction and maintenance 
defence employees at Dockyard took to the street 
during their lunch break Friday to take their case to 
the “taxpaying public ” 

The demonstration—to illustrate that contracting 
out of work would cost more in the long run, and that 
job loss would probably strip the Victoria economy of 
$5 million—failed to convince at least one woman. 

She apparently mistook the sign carriers for strik¬ 
ers and became involved in a shouting match. Wit 
nesses said that at one point her car was rocked by a 
group of men. The woman said demonstrators broke a 
car Window and that one man pulled some of her hair 
out. She said she intended to lay charges. 

However, late Friday night Esquimau police said 
they had been investigating the case, but so far had 
found no evidence on which to charge anyone 

Friday’s short demonstration had its beginning 
last week with the layoff of 17 short term workers as a 
result of what the Public Service Alliance of Canada 
says is the first job loss of many to come through 
spending cuts. 

Ixn Lightfoot. president rtf Local 1016 of the l nion 


of National Defence Employees (a component of the 
182.000-member PSAC). said 43 casual employees are 
due to be fired next Friday, and that close to 50 
others—some with as much as three years’ service- 
will be gone by the end of October 

The Colopist reported earlier that the P8AC feared 
as many as 300 federal employees on Vancouver 
Island may lose their jobs as part of a plan to cut the 
working ranks across the country by 5.000. 

Lightfoot said Friday the taxpayer will be saddled 
with bigger costs in the long run because “construc¬ 
tion and maintenance programs have increased with 
the jobs being contracted out as political plums.” 

lie believes as many as 200 jobs will be lost in 
Victoria alone. 

‘instead of slashing costs for contract work, the 
government is picking on its own employees as the 
whipping boys and making them pay for its own inept 
policies. ’’ 

There were demonstrations at other Canadian 
bases Friday and Lightfoot exacts there will be 
repeat performances if the government doesn't change 

its puli, j 


E&N fighters keep 
flushing out facts 


Tht E and N Steering Com¬ 
mittee was flushing out some 
interesting figures Friday- 
some good and others a little 
cm the delicate side. 

Committee chairman John 
Cooper felt even CP Rail 
might change its mind about 
the economic future of the 
little passenger serv ice after 
learning that revived interest 
in thfc E and N had provided it 
with 8,400 passengers last 
month—some 900 more'than 
had boarded the train during 
all of 1976. 

While he had a battery of 
other optimistic figures. Coo¬ 
per said the E and N is sud¬ 
denly faced with a shortage 
of toilets 

The regular 70-seat car has 
one-toilet, still functional, he 
said. but one of the two on the 
100-seat addition broke down 
last week. 

“It’s incredible, but we now 
find that CP Rail, even 
though It has dozens and 
dozens of these carsHtoronly 
ona spare toilet left,” said 
Cooper. 

The spare is apparently on 
its way from Montreal, but he 
wasn't sure when it might be 
expected—or what would 


happen now if another toilet 
dies and there are no spares 
left. 

To Cooper and other rail¬ 
way bum, the situation 
brings back the old haunting 
refrain: “Passengers will 
please refrain from flushing 
toilets when the train is 
standing in the station." 

With today’s shortage, 
however, they say it’s simply 
a matter of refraining “till 
the other biffy gets here.” 

The figures projected by 
the committee would indicate 
that more than one toilet (and 
train) would be in order. Coo¬ 
per feels (he passenger ser 
vice will have carried 40. 
000 by year’s end, since 
loadings to date have already 
lopped 26.000 

“It’s ironic that only eight 
months ago this same sen ice 
was ordered abandoned by 
the Canadian Transport 
Commission on the grounds 
that it was uneconomic and 
likely to remain so,” Cooper 
said. 

The CTC ruled in favor of a 
CP-Rail application to drop 
the historic passenger ser 
vice that serves Vancouver 
Island from Victoria to Cour¬ 


tenay. but has put off the date 
of execution to Dec. 13 to 
allow the province to chal¬ 
lenge the ruling in the 
courts. 

The committee was formed 
by E and N employees, mem 
bers of the United Transpor 
tation Union. It appears to 
have access to figures con 
reming the-railway’s busi¬ 
ness, but declines to say what 
that access is. , 

Cooper said passenger re 
venue for August alone was 
$32,000, while gross revenues 
for all of 1974 amounted to 
only $67,000 


Fair shake 
for 

Joe Clark 

Federal Conservative lead 
er Joe Clark wHI be at the 
Saanichton fairgrounds on 
Monday for some old-fa 
shioned handshaking and 
baby-kissing at the Saanich^ 
ton Fall Fair. 

Clark is expected to arrive 
at the grounds between 2 
an<f 5 p.m.. said Allen 
Houthton, a Victoria enter* 
tainfeent manager wl\o is 
handling Clark’s public rela¬ 
tions at the local level. 

It will be a quick stopover. 
Houghton said 


Leach River diversion 

« .. 1,1 --- 

Licensing conflict: 
More water or fish? 


By NANCY BROWN 


A scheme to divert the Leach River into Sooke Lake 
is being held up because federal fisheries officials want 
the water in the Sooke River for fish, according to Ron 
Upward, commissioner for the Greater Victoria Water 
District. 

“Somewhere around the 1990s somebody is going to 
have to make a big decision—do they want* water or do 
they want food.” he said. 

AT PRESENT the plan is to divert the Leach and so in 
crease the runoff into Sooke Lake. The water board would 
want only 20 per cent of the annual 5 billion gallons that 
is in the Leach every year. 

However, fisheries officials want the licence to stipulate 
that the board remain limited to. the 20 per cent for all 
time. 

The water commission applied for the water rights li¬ 
cence a year ago. but it has still not come through be 
cause of the dispute over the wording on the licence. 

“THE CRISIS will come in the mid 1990s.” said Upward 
“By then the city will have grown enough that the full 
capacity of the Sooke reservoir will be needed, and 
someone—thank goodness it won t be me—will have to 
decide which way to go. They’ll either have to limit 
city growth, or provide water 

“By then, who knows, food may well be more important 
than water and the decision will be to provide for fish 
first and people second.” 

I But, Upward said, he is not prepared to make any com 
mitment on the subject at present. He wants an open 
licence with final decisions to be made later in light of con¬ 
ditions at that time. 

“By 1995 we will know better what the priorities are,” 
he said. 

ACCORDING TO Upward, there is storage in Sooke 
Lake for up to 4^ billion gallons of water But the flow from 
the Sooke River in a dry year Is not sufficient to fill the lake 
if it has been drawn down to a very low level. 

The Leach is the major tributary to Sooke River, 
with a flow of 12 billion to 15 billion gallons a year, against 
Sooke River's 7^ billion gallons. 

“We would want only about ^jfttttton gallons a year from 
the Leach and leave the rest for the fish.” Upward said. 

Concrete and tunnel work for the diversion would cost 
about $500,000. and the money is sitting in the bank. “We 
don’t like having money in the bank like that.” he said 
“It is earning about 7»* per cent interest, while the rate 
of inflation is around 12 per cent, so that we lose money 
all the time we are waiting for a decision 

HE POINTED OUT that the district will be picking up 
20.000 to 25,060 new customers next year when the Saanich 
Peninsula water line is completed, and w ith the recently-an¬ 
nounced aid to reduce water rates there, farmers will be 
able to afford to use water for irrigation, so it is difficult 
to estimate how much water will be needed 

However, he felt that demand will increase agound 
500 million to 700 million above the present demarfd of 
some 8 billion gallons annually. 

“The point is that if we have a dry summer and let 
that reservoir get low, and then we have a dry winter 
with low runoff, we won’t be able to refill the reservoir 
enough for the following summer unless we can use some 
of the flow from the Leach.” 

.Upward said provision has still been made for raising 
Sboke Lake Dam another 25 feet it necessary 

THE WATER DISTRICT is at present negotiating for 
rights on the Canadian National Railways right-of-way 
which is being abandoned. When the dam has to be raised, 
the right-of-way will be on the level that will be flooded. All 
of the roads around the lake will also have to be moved. 

Upward said there is no intention at present to raise 
the dam. but the district is carrying on with logging of 
the area and with acquiring rights and moving roads so 
that there will be no problems when the additional reservoir 
capacity is needed, probably sometime in the 1990s 


DRIVER KILLED 
IN 2-CAR CRASH 

A 20-year-old Greater Victoria man died Friday 
following a two-car accident in driving rain on Sooke 
Road. 

The dead man was the driver of one of the cars, 
which crossed over the centreline into the path of a 
westbound vehicle, Colwood RCMP said. 

He was pronounced dead on arrival at 7:30 p.m. at 
Victoria General Hospital. 

Six people in aU were involved in the two-car 
accident, police added. Three received minor injuries 
and were taken to Victoria General* 

No names were released 


UVic opening 

300-bed 

residence 


Telephones. Smoke detec 
tors. Controlled entrances. 
Individual thermostat con¬ 
trols. 

And if you’re a boy, there’s 
a girl. And vice-versa. But at 
a respectable distance Like, 
on the next floor. 

Co-educationai living at the 
University of Victoria hasn't 
become any more snug than 
that so far. but what there is 
of it will be there with all 
those other new features in 
the new 300-bed residence 
complex that will greet UVIc 
students this year. 

The complex, which will 
boost on-campus accommo 
dation to 900, will be officially 
opened at 11:30 a m. Friday 
by Senator Ray Perrault 

Named Gordon Head, the 
new residence %ill have three 
halls. 

University officials say 
that if enrolment remains the 
same this year there will be 
on-campus accommodation 
for 13 per cent of the under 
graduate population com¬ 
pared with eight per cent last 
year. 

There is one other impor¬ 
tant difference: In the past 
on-campus living was res¬ 
tricted to first and second 
year students. Now it will in-* 
elude those io third and 
fourth year programs. 


Shirley Baker, manager of 
Housing and Conference Ser¬ 
vices, says UVic president 
Howard Petch recognized the 
need for additional quarters 
after spending the first six 
months of his term living in 
residence. He’s been involved 
in the project ever since. 

According to literature 
prepared by the university, 
the four-floor complex will 
have a co-educational princi 
pie “based on the concept 
that the social development 
of young men and women is 
aided by living in the same 
building.” 

The university says this 
was successfully tested in Sir 
Arthur Currie Hall of the 
Craigdarroch complex where 
the ground floor houses male 
students and the second and 
third floors, females. 

Mariner trityite 

The Thermopylae Club will 
hold a ceremony at 2:30 p.m. 
on Sept. 10 at the grave of 
Captain Joshua Freeman at 
Ross Bay cemetery. Free¬ 
man was master of the clip¬ 
per-type Glory of the Seas for 
20 years (18W 1904). The ship 
carried coat between Vancou¬ 
ver Island and California A 
wreath will be placed on the 
grave. 


Firemen would welcome water line 


A permanent water line 
carrying Sooke Lake water 
to North Saanich's Ardmore 
area could be a boon In the 
event of a major fire, Ard 
more ratepayers past presi¬ 
dent Harold Parrott said Fri¬ 
day. 

The Ardmore area has a 
history of not wanting out 
side water serviee, and con¬ 


tinues to favor its own inde¬ 
pendent well water supply 

Regional planning provides 
for a 12-inch main from the 
Saanich Peninsula's perma 
nent line to serve the Ard 
more area within the next 
decade, possibly boosting the 
line's $4.6 million price tag. 

The province recently fun¬ 


nelled a $3 million capital-in 
lerest fund into the main line, 
along with other cost-reduc-* 
tion programs 

Parrott said in an inter¬ 
view that a reliable water 
supply would be a “built-in 
safety factor” for the North 
Saanich volunteer fire de¬ 
partment. 

The volunteer department 


was top-notch. Parrott said, 
but if faced with a major con 
flagration, would need a reli¬ 
able water supply. 

A permanent water supply 
would also “be a tremendous 
safety factor because of the 
value of houses presently 
there,” Parrott said. 

More than 300 families live 


in the area in homes up to 

$ 100,000 

“It could mean the differ 
ence between partial and 
total loss and could be a fac 
tor In keeping insurance 
rates down,” he said. 

The cost of a line to the 
area might be high, but costs 
of a major fire could be 
even higher. Parrott said. 


Some peninsula residents 
have argued that' Ardmore 
groundwater should be rc 
tained for farming, in light of 
keeping the area,rural 

They fear a water line 
might bring massive residen 
tial development, not to men 
tion the costs of paying for 
the serviced water. 



Tryouts 
popular 
at pool 


Victoria's Crystal Pool reo¬ 
pened Friday, with free 
swimming for all, and free 
access to the new exercise 


Pool had boon closed for 
renovations since early May 
and IU reopening brought 
lineups. Free swimming con¬ 
tinues over the Labor Day 
weekend. Also Friday, the 
provincial government sent a 
cheque for $77,572 to the city 
as IU one-third share of the 
coot ef the project which taw 
Installation of electronic tim¬ 
ing oqilpmeat and under 
water speakers and lights. 
Pictures show sauna and ex¬ 
ercise equipment la me. 































! 


DAILY COLONIST, Victoria, B.C.. Saturday, September 2. I97R 



'j li 



FITTING ROOM 




N 





?2§tl£f 11 



■■ ^ 



! r.; ,r WX' i 

yviyffi 


Chance Like This Again! 

■vymF- /yxsct 



14H&M! 


lit 


SMNitfful Summar Blooming 

HEATHERS- 95* 

TROPICAL PUNTS AND 
PUNT ACCESSORIES 

oem LABOUR DAY • to 5:30 
479 OOME RO. EAST 304744 

iy^-1 ^ A f r r in ■ 11: A Hi i nnl 

% 2 n w nffPiniM, iwTTTifny 9iwwvn 9 • wwwi/ 


^BlCAHZf 

ends T “*^ge of f his 
Take advantag n( 

Grea ‘ F More Day*- 
jor Two Mor 


Dear Ann Landers: I 
picked up a paperback at the 
airport recently called The 
Jewish Connection, by M. 
Hirsh Goldberg. In that book 
there's a very funny bit that 
was attributed to your col 
umn. I never miss your part 
of the paper and don't recall 
seeing It. The story is so In¬ 
credible I'd like to hear 
directly from you if It’s on the 
level. 

According to the way Hirsh 
Goldberg tells it, you re¬ 
ceived a letter about an Eng 
lish setter named Leviticus 
who kept kosher. The dog had 
lived in a Jewish household 
the first four months of his 
life Not only did the dog re¬ 
fuse to eat meat that wasn't 
kosher but his master had to 
put a Yiddish newspaper 
under the bowl. He tried both 
the Chicago Sun Times and 
the Wall Street Journal but 
Leviticus couldn’t be fooled. 
He wouldn’t eat the meat. 
The letter was signed. “Right 
Side Ip.” 

You responded by citing a 
newspaper item published in 
the Toronto Star about a ko¬ 
sher cat owned by Rabbi 
Lewis Farrell. The cat 
seemed to know the Jewish 
dietary laws because he re¬ 
fused to drink his milk when 
meat was served. Some of the 
rabbi's friends were skepti¬ 
cal when he related stores 
about his “kosher” cat, so he 
brought them home. To their 
amazement, the cat proved 
that the rabbi had not exag¬ 
gerated one bit. 



9?x 


tino turmturt • paintings • prints 

THE ISLAND GALLERY 

2106 Oak Bay Avanua Tuaa Sat 


Sears 


Shop at our Warohouao Clearance Contra 
Saturdays, 9:30-3:30. Located at 765 Vanalman. 


Clearance 

Centre 

Save 40% -. limited selection of our 

Spots O Podic bedding unite vnanufscturod by Simmons. 
Listed boftow ars 3 sxamptes; 
shop for many unpdvsrtlssd unite. 

Save *176 

Extra-Firm Queen-size unit na098 

6 only 73463. *•$. *438.08.A WW 

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Luxury 54” bed unit OdQ98 

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‘Luxury Plus’ 54” bed unit 9 C 798 

4 only 73592 Rag. $429.98. .A*# ff 

A 

Appliance Clearance — some 
scratch and dent models. 

^push-button d ifhwoih o r portabte 

3 only. 2-4evai wash. 1-WNte. 1-Avocado. 1-Goki $40 TF 

Original Reg. ssMng price 9429.96-S439.98 .. t#0 I 

5-push button cHstiwsshor ports bto 

2 only. Laminated lop Fsrvtoroed drying 4 TF 

Original Rsg. sailing price 9459.98 . ^F I ■ 

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Original Rag. selling price 9499.98 .. . § 

15 cu. ft. Frostisss fridge ^ 

Cantilever shelves SCQ# 

Original Reg. selling price $699.98 .. m 

17xu. ft Frostisss fridge 

2 only. Split cantiiever shelves. Porcelain liner Coppertone "W 

Original Rsg. sslUng price $739.98 . . M 

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1 only. Harveet Gold. 18 cu. ft Freezer holds approx 215-lb %^W 4 

Original Rsg. ssMng price 9869.98 . m I § 

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Servioe Centre, 788 Vanalman Ave. . .. Juat off the Pat Bay Hwy. 


mm 


Tell me, Ann, did this ever 
appear in your column? If so. 
w hen? — A Skeptic 

Dear Skep: Yes, In Septem 
her 1973. You must have been 
out of town. 

Dear Ann Leader s : I have 
been married less than a 
year. I wonder how many 
other young brides have this 
problem. My husband seems 
to think he needs two night of 
“freedom’’ every week, to 
enjoy himself with'his single 
friends. * 

1 have beggetPhijn to take 
me with him but he says the 
guys don’t like to have a wife 
tagging along 

I wouldn’t mind one night a 
week but I think two nights is 
one too many. Besides, he v 
usually comes home late and 
drunk. 

We tried a trial separation 
but it didn’t last long. We love 
each other so much it almost 
drove us crazy. I’m — Des¬ 
perate la N.C. 

Dear N.C.: Obviously your 
husband wants the advan 
tages of marriage along with 
the fun of being single 

You have two choices: Re¬ 
sign yourself to a lifetime 
with a man who will never 
stop running around, or sepa 
rate again — and this time 
stay apart until he agrees to 
take his marriage vows 
seriously. I’d agree to one 
night with the “guys” (no 
dolls) every two weeks, but 
that should be the limit. 


Your 

Good 

Health 


Dear Dr. ThoMeson: I am 
70 and am told I have Parkin 
son’s disease. Anything new 
on this to help us older folks 
Iwho seem plagued with it? 
What about certain surgery 
U’ve heard of? — J.S. 
■Although much serious re 
search goes on. I’m sorry to 
say there are no really new 
developments in cure or con 
trol. Parkinson’s affects 
more than a million older cjti 
zens in North America, ac 
cording to latest statistics I 
have 

As you know, the chief 
symptoms of this are tremor 
in the limbs, muscle rigidity, 
instability in walking, and so- 
called ‘’pillrolling'' move 
ment of the fingers. A pecu 
liar characteristic is a ten 
dency for the palsy to be 
worse when at rest. 

The reason a cure is so 
elusive is that we don't know 
the exact cause. Symptoms 
may follow encephalitis 
(brain inflammation) or the 
use of drugs such as the Iran 
quilizers. Victims are usually 
in their 60s or 70s, and in fact 
much of the rise in numbers 
of people affected might be 
due to the simple fact of in¬ 
creased life spans. 

A deficency of a chemical 
(dopamine) may exist in the 
part of the brain that controls 
motor functions (move 
ment). From this fact, a new 
drug called L-dopa-mine was 
developed several years ago 
Acting for that missing bratn 
substance, it has helped 
many pateints. Before that, 
belladonna was the chief me 
cicine and is still useful in 
early cases. Amantadine, a 
similar drug, has been used 
for mild cases but may have 
unpleasant side effects. 

Controls are about all that 
are available, and you should 
not discount the value of 
physical therapy. See a local 
rehabilitation unit. Although 
surgery has been tried. It is 
limited to a small number of 
patients. The goal is to eiimi 
nate the affected brain cells 
While anything short of a 
cure will always be second 
best, moat Parkinson’s pa 
Uents can achieve some d<> 
free of control, and I hop* 
you get right on with the 


FALCON ARTISTIC 

GYWUmC SCHOOL 

f>- 1^11-- aai- 

rTOVKJlOy POS*!IV9 

gymnastic axpBhBnc* 
♦or 


demonstration, display* 
Moat complete gymnastic 
ptogram in town for young 


Mr*. M. KUnovsky 

REGISTRATION 

FRT, 8CPT 1st. 
5:30-7.30 p.m 
SAT., WEPT. 2nd. 

10 a.m.-U:30 p.m. 
715 Johnson Straat 


. ) 


r 


i 


































































DAILY COLONIST, Victoria, B.C., Saturday, September 2, Ilia I*J 



McGeer gets tough on pot 


A 39-year old Winnipeg man and a juvenile appeared 
in court Friday charged with breaking into the Victoria 
district welfare offices and stealing $70,000 worth of che¬ 
ques. 

Frederick Leroy Hodel appeared in Victoria provincial 
court before Judge William Ostler while the juvenile, 
whose name cannot be published because of his age. was 
in family division court where he was charged with 
escaping lawful custody and wiful damage to the juvenile 
detention home as well as breaking and entering the 
welfare office at 1K20 Blanshard early Wednesday morn¬ 
ing. 

Hodel. who first gave arresting Victoria police detectives 
the name of Eric Larson, was remanded in custody until 
Tuesday for bail hearin? and possible election of trial 
method. 

The juvenile was remanded, also in cust<»dy. until Wed 
nesday because he had no legal counsel. 


Two of three 17-year-olds charged with another Wed 
nesday break-in. this one at the-Medical Arts Building at 
110$ Pandora, pleaded guilty to the charge and were re 
manded until Sept. 29 for a pre-sentence report and sen¬ 
tencing. 

Thomas Allen Smart. 1241 Acton, and Scott Evan Starck. 
1226 Rudlin, entered the guilty pleas while William Clifford 
Scott, also of 1226 Rudlin. has been remanded in custody 
until Tuesday without plea. 

Crown counsel Don Laughton told the court Smart and 
Starck were found inside the building on the fourth floor 
shortly after midnight hiding behind cardboard boxes 
Laughton said a quantity of controlled drugs was found 
on Starck, who told police he was looking for “pills and 
speed.” 

Laughton also said Smart, who told police he acted as 
the lookout received a suspended sentence and six months' 
probation April 3 of this year for making indecent phone 
calls. 

Both were remanded until Sept 29 but Smart was re- v 
leased on his own recognizance in the sum of $500 and 
on condition he obey a 9 p nt nightly curfew until then. 


From now on marijuana 
smoking teacher*—if they’re 
caught—will be swept away 
with the ashes. 

And If they escape the 
broom of authority wielded 
by Education Minister Pat 
McGeer they could still be in 
for trouble—if. for instance, 
they hit the bottle with too 
‘■much vigor. 

In making it clear that pot 
puffers won’t be tolerated re¬ 
gardless of whether there are 
convictions, McGeer answer¬ 
ed another question by saying 
that problem drinkers face 
the same fate. 

By Friday the minister's 
critics were smoking. But the 
source was indignation and 
not marijuana. 

To Pal Bradv, president of 
the B.C. Teachers Federa¬ 
tion, McGeer is overstepping 
his authority by sitting in 
judgment of teachers con¬ 
victed on marijuana of¬ 
fences, but receiving condi¬ 
tional discharges from the 
courts. 

While the federation 
doesn't side with drug use, it 
feels McGeer’s decision to 
revoke the licences of such 
’teachers in the future spells 
“double jeopardy” for the 
teachers. 

Of the minister s decision 
to have certificate seekers 



McGeer 

...morale standards 

asked if they use drugs, 
Brady says: “We see this as 
an invasion of privacy and a 
violation of the individual's 
civil liberties.” 

Some members of the Co¬ 
quitlam school board were 
also unhappy with McGeer. 
who said the tough action had 
to be taken in the future if 
boards weren't goinjf to take 
responsibility for the “moral 
conduct” of teachers. 


His reference was to the 
decision of the Coquitlam 
board to reinstate teacher 
Dennis Hilton, convicted of 
using marijuana but given a 
conditional discharge. 

Members of the board said 
they had no option but to 
reinstate the teacher. There 
was a suggestion that 
McGeer should be taking 
what action he deemed neces 
sary and not making the 
board a “scapegoat.” 

But. while he had his 
critics, the minister also had 
support. Chairmen of most 
school boards appeared to be 
generally in favor of what he 
was doing. 

For some of them, the rea 
son was the same as that 
advanced by McGeer— 
teachers should be beyond 
reproach. It was essential 
that they set a good example 
for their young students. 

Said McGeer. “Only people 
with the highest moral stan¬ 
dards should be teaching our 
children. And people who use 
pot in defiance of existing 
Canadian law are not, in my 
opinion, of the highest moral 
character.” 

He said his ministry' had 
told the Coquitlam board it 
had the authority to fire the 
teacher for cause. As a re¬ 
sult, he was extremely disap¬ 


pointed with the board for 
reinstating the teacher. 

He would not overrule the 
board in this case, he said, 
because he supports the con¬ 
cept of autonomy for school 
boards. 

“But in the future the gov¬ 
ernment will take matters in 
its own hands if the local 
board refuses to act,” he 
promised. 0 

McGeer says a little-used 
section of the Public Schools 
Act gives him the necessary 
clout to rescind or refuse cer¬ 
tificates of those smoking il¬ 
legal stuff. 

When he was asked wheth¬ 
er he would take thfe same 
stand with problem drinkers, 
he said: “Drinking isn't 
against the law, but the use of 
marijuana Is. But even so, 
there is no room in the class¬ 
room for the alcoholic. 1 don't 
think they should be teach¬ 
ing.” 



***-|||n wJk ■■ ■ — n ■ ■ iajin a|I 

wnere wesienicrs win airways 

Western Canada Lottery Foundation 


An 18-year-old who admitted an Aug 23 break in at a 
restaurant received a six-month sentence and one year s 
probation. 

Ian Trett, 1303 Gladstone, entered the guilty plea and 
court was informed that the caretaker where Trett lived 
found a large quantity of liquor in Trett s residence and 
called Victoria police. 

Police found 10 bottles of rye whisky, other bottles of 
rum and tequila and about three dozen beer A break-in 
had been reported earlier that day at the Golden Palace 
Restaurant. H66 Yates, in which 18 bottles of liquor was 
taken. 

l^ughton also said Trett was convicted of breaking 
and entering July 6, 1976 in Victoria, when he received a 
suspended sentence and probation, and Nov. 3, 1976, in 
Edmonton, when he received a one-day jail term. 

Defence lawyer Brian Mackenzie said Trett was on 
welfare and had been drinking before the incident 


A 27 vear-old man who had a Vancouver charge of utter 
ing a forged passport waived here was sentenced to two 
months in jail. 

Garth Clarence Sexton of Vancouver entered the guilty 
plea to the September, 1975 charge. 

Laughton said Sexton used the name Gerard Maurice 
Barrington to obtain a passport from the Vancouver of 
fire. 

Laughton said that Sexton was an escaper from a New 
foundland prison where he was serving a 10-year jail 
term for importing narcotics. The sentence was imposed 
April 22, 1976, Laughton stated. 


Fined for drinking driving were> Ronald George De- 
haan. 18. of Delta. $750: Dary l KennetlrMcMillan. 20. of 1134 
Wychbury. $450: Anthony Frank Grad. 25, of Clinton. 
Ont., $400; and Ramona Winnifred Williams. 24, of 961 
Pauquachin Lane in Sidney. $50. 

In addition, Dehaan was fined $250 for refusing a 
breath test demand and Williams was placed on two 
years’ probation, prohibited from driving in Canada for 
two years, ordered to perform 100 hours of community 
service work and to accept DARS or a doctor's counsel¬ 
ling. 


Tourist traffic up 
in first half of ’78 


B.C. increased its tourist 
trafffc by 6.2 pef cent during 
the first six months of 1978, 
the second highest increase 
in Canada. 

Only Newfoundland beat 
B.C. in percentage increase 
but. said Travel Minister 
Grace McCarthy, “their 
whole total of American tour¬ 
ists is just one per cent of 
ours.” 

This year. Newfoundland's 
American tourists numbered 
6.000 while B.C. attracted 
600.000 visitors from south of 
the border 

Mrs. McCarthy said there 
was no doubt that this year's 
tourist figures would top 
1977's record-breaking year. 

“More than 10.7 million 
people visited B.C. in 1977, 
the equivalent of four for 
every resident,” she said. 

Noting that her ministry's 
monthly report came at a 
time when the federal tour¬ 
ism office was painting a 
gloomy picture, the minister 
said the difference between 
the federal and provincial 
scenes lay . ittitudes. 

“The peop.e of B.C. took a 
look at their own situation 
more than two years ago and 
corrected their situation,”"" 
she said. 

Statistics Canada stated a 
few days ago that there would 
be a $429 million deficit in the 
tourist business this year. 
The deficit is based on a “bal- 


on the two main routes be-* 
tween Vancouver Island and 
the mainland were up 17.3 per 
cent, carrying a total of 2.8 
million passengers. * 

Overseas entries increased 
14.6 per cent during the six- 
month period. 

Restaurant sales were 12.8 
per cent higher than the first 
six months of last year, gaso¬ 
line sales were up 8.3 per cent 
and traffic through the 
Rogers Pass increased by 7.2 
per cent. 

Hofei occupancy rates 
were up five per cent from 
last year, averaging through¬ 
out the province 62.1 per 
cent. 

Mrs. McCarthy stressed 
that the figures were for the 
first six months and do not 
include July and August. 
“The figures for the peak 
months will be made public 
as soon as they are com¬ 
piled,” she said. 


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ance of trade” created by the 
number of Canadians leaving 
the country for their vaca¬ 
tions compared with the num¬ 
ber of tourists coming in. 

Besides B.C. and New¬ 
foundland Ontario and New 
Brunswick recorded in¬ 
creases in tourists with On¬ 
tario up 1.9 per cent and New 
Brunswick 4.7 per cent. 

The other six provinces re¬ 
corded decreases in tourist 
traffic ranging from three 
per cent to 49 per rent. 

Ferry passenger loadings 

Fisher named 
to water post 

James Douglas Fisher, 

1985 Lands End Road, has 
been appointed to the Saanich 
Peninsula Water Commis¬ 
sion. 

The appointment was an- ___ 

nounced Thursday by Muni- 

Mlni^ f HuSoSli" OU ‘ ing ★★★★★★★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ 

Fisher, a lawyer, replaces 
Terrence Holmes who re¬ 
cently resigned. 


EAR PIERCING 

BACK-TO-SCHOOl OFFER -5 ,S 6 95 9 95 

Mayfair Shopping Centre Phone 385-2042 


£ 


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LAMP SHADES 

Repaired or Made 
To Order 

THE VICTORIA 
LAMPSHADE SHOP 
493-1 tarvsito M. E. 383-1544 


Looting 

network 

broken 


PLYMOUTH, Mass. (LPI) 
— Police and FBI agents 
raided a home owned by an¬ 
tique dealers in a remote 
wooded area Friday, re¬ 
covered an estimated $250. 
000 in stolen art and antiques 
and arrested a man charged 
with running a three-state, 
house looting operation 

“There was s p much stuff 
that we spent all morning 
loading it into trucks,” said 
police chief Richard Nagle. 
“We filled up one whole mov¬ 
ing van.” 

The items, which Included 
paintings, furniture, oriental 
rugs, pewter and silverware, 
were confiscated from a 
room above a garage at the 
expensive ranch style home 
of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Ed¬ 
mond. who own an antique 
shop in nearby Braintree. 

Police arrested their son 
Bruce Edmonds. 29. who 
lived in the room. He pleaded 
innocent to 13 counts of lar¬ 
ceny and breaking and enter 
ing at his arraignment at 
. Plymouth court. 


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iO DAILY COLONIST, Victoria, B.C.. Saturday. Saptambar J. 1*1* 




Up With People to entertain Victoria 


YOU HAVE ONLY 
7 DAYS TO SEE 


A 100 member group of 
young people of the interna 
tional Up With People organi¬ 
zation will vlstt Victoria from 
Sept 12-17. 


The group will perform a 
song-and-dance show at H 
p m. Sept 15 at the Memorial 
Arena. Ticket prices are $1. 
$2 and S3. 


Up With People, an inde ing and awareness around 

pendartt. non profit .due. ,ha young peopla 

tional corporation, seeks to j n the organization achieve 
promote cultural understand that goal is to travel in per 



A long time ago in a gaiaxy 
jacjarawey.. 

ON THURSDAY, SEPT. 7TH “STAR 
WARS” WILL BE WITHDRAWN 
FROM THEATRES ACROSS CANADA, 
AND LEAVE OUR GALAXY... 


WINNER 

I ACADEMY AWARDS 
BEST PICTURE 

REST DIRECTOR 

Dear story aho«cr«meia*' tKV 
KIT FILM EDITING • BEST ART DIRECTION 





fcamng 

MARKHAMILL HAWXISON FORD CARRIE FISHER 
Pei€ROJ5HING 

AI£CgSnN€SS 

^*Ten end Oeccrd ty Roducrd tv Muucty 

G€ORG€iUCAS GAW KURTZ JOHNW1UIAMS 

prints or DC w* * iBDeacoa^* 

CHILDREN $1.25 (Thia Engagement Only) 

MATINEES: FRIDAY, SATURDAY, 
MONDAY (LABOUR DAY) 

AT 2:30 P.M. 

EVENINGS: 7:00 & 9:05 P.M. 

AIR CONDITIONED 


PAUL ROBERT 
NEWMAN REDFORD 

ROBERT SHAW 

» Bal/PHUUPSPBOOUt TON O' 

A SfORGt ROT HILL FILM 

THE STING 


Ivrrv woman in town was < h.isinv; 
Charlie Nit hols... Iverv worn.in 
hut Ann... who had 
different ideas. 

^ Hk 1 his IS fit. If 

\3 M lov »* till II >N 



Sfe —me 


earth 

house hold 
natural foods 


J2> 


2248 

Od< Bay Avenue 


vegetables 

seeds • nuts 

^ herbs • books breads 
soaps • goodies 
luices • spices fruit • grams 
dary products 


forming group* to different 
countries. 

The organization consists 
of 500 youths between the 
Bps of 17 and 25 who have 
completed high school. They 
are divided into touring 
groups of 100; there are IN 
nationalities currently repre¬ 
sented. 

When a group tours, they 
have a sponsor in each com 
munity where they appear. In 
Victoria, the sponsor is Good¬ 
will Bottling Ltd. 

The young people are bil 
letted in area homes at each 
stop. 

Headquarters of the orga¬ 
nization are in Tucson, Ariz., 
Oslo. Norway, and Caracas. 
Venezuela and members are 
from Canada, the U.S.. the 
Scandinavian countries, Eng¬ 
land. Ireland. Switzerland, 
Belgium, Venezuela. Mexico. 
Poland. Japan and other 
countries. 

It is expensive to put five 
100 member group* on road 
each year, and costs each 
member 14.500 a year. That 
$-1,500 pays about one third of 
the cost for a year on lour. 
The additional two thirds of 


the financing comes from 
gifts and grants and from ad 
missions to performance* of 
the groups 

Average tHpe per member 
with a group is about one 
year, with a 05 per cent turn 
over in membership each 
year 

The young people organize 
the tours themselves. The 
group coming to Victoria ha* 
nine to 10 tons of lighting, 
tound and stage equipment 
Two Victorians, Bev Cain and 
Janice' Viloski, will appear 
with the group 

It has a 10-piece orchestra, 
guitars, brass, piano, drum* 
and performs folk. rock, big 
band, contemporary, tradi 
tional. original music and 
medleys. They perform a 
family show stressing audi 
cnce participation and com 
municalion. 

The group is a recently 
formed one. having finished 
vocal and dance training in 
Tucson. Ariz. They have per 
formed in Los Angeles at 
the Arco-Jes.se Owens Olynr 
pics for urban children, and 
have just come from a tour of 
the OkanAgan. 


Lottery fuss 
break ‘soon’ 


^ opening soon in the Cedar Hill Mall ^ 


VANCOUVER (CP) - B.C. 
Provincial Secretary Grace 



NGEFIIL BEAUTY” 

With English Sub-Title* 


WARNING Violent 
Scenoe—8.C. Director 


MIDNiTE SHOW AT 11:30 P.M. 
FRIDAY, SATURDAY & SUNDAY 

WARNING. COMPLETELY CONCERNED WITH SEX. (B.C DIRECTORi 




DUSK TO DAWN 

THIS SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 3 


BURT REYNOLDS 

THE END 


WAlTHt OLENDA AIT 

MATTHAU JACKSON CARNEY 

"House Calls” y* 

RICHARD BENJAMIN hCXE v/v.j ^212 

1 COMPUTE SHOW W0H1 
' The Sting 7:1 

_House Celle 9: 

fraWaaffcMa HMW 




MARSHA 

MASON 


THE SPY 
, WHO 
LOVED MEI 

AUDREY ROSE 


“CONVOY” plu.BurtR.ynold.ln “GATOR” 


WARNING: Some nudity, coeree I 
guege and violence. (B.C. Director) 


GATES AT 8:00. SHOW AT DUSK 


SUNDAY- 
TRIPLE FEATURE 
HORROR SHOW 


EA8% INDIAN SHOW ROW SUNDAY. MPT. 3 AT 3 P.M. 

“■ABAAIIO STARRING: Heme Mallnl, 

_ ■NnWVI# Dharmandra, Ashe* Kumar, 

Mr Up* MlMHl Rishl Kapoor, Reena Ray, 
sneme Anand 

■AST INDIAN SHOW FOR MONDAY. SSPT. 4 AT 3 P.M. 

“SACHHA MIRA ROOP HAI" 

SUPER HIT IN PUNJASI 

_ STARRING: Manmahan Krlshaa, Mehar Miter, 

KRaryM Shainga 

haiMlMe^ (Colour. English Subtitle*) 


••THEATRE OF BLOOD 

ADMISSION $3.75 BATES 1:00 8H0W AT DUSK 


I ITlbblCUM DftlNM 


■wnaide at TBeum 


WARNING Occasional religious ridicule 
and coar b* language (END). PARENTS 
could Inghton Bom# children (ROSE) 


2 7M1 (S C. Director) 


Cl AIL\ 


QUADRA AT HILLSIOE 
382-3370 


McCarthy says she expects a 
break soon in the continuing 
provincial-federal squabble 
over lotteries. 

Mrs. McCarthy said a tele 

phone conference, held 
Thursday between the 10 pm 
vincial ministers responsible 
for lotteries, resulted in a 
new proposal for the federal 
government. 

Although she declined to 
give details about the propov 
al, Mrs. McCarthy said It 
contained a number of ele 
ments related to cost-sharing 
and jurisdiction question* 

Mrs. McCarthy said she ev 
pects.B.C. lottery ticket dt* 
tributors to hold off from ap 
plying for computer terminal 
licences for the federal go\ 
ern me n C s new ft computer 
lottery until after results of 
the latest negotiations are 
known. 

She made the remark* 
after Iona Campagnolo, fed 
eral minister responsible for 
lotteries, Thursday an¬ 
nounced a new commission 
rate structure for distribu 
tors designed to compete with 
rates paid by provincial lot¬ 
teries. 

Mrs. Campagnolo had pre 
viously offered to split reve 
nues with the provinces of the 
new $1 weekly Loto Select 
Game, which will use com 
puter terminals so customer* 
can select their own game 
number* 

She had also proposed that 
the federal government bow 
out of all lotteries involving 
tickets under $10, while pros 
inces ignore the $10 and up 
market. 

However, both offer* were 
turned down by nine of th$ 10 
provinces, which want the 
federal government to get out 
of the lottery business. 


"After an, what are friends for?’ 



I ■ 


■' ■vjSf 





REYNOLDS 


BUST RfvHOLDS b-bSuci*. 


STROTHER MARTIN • DAVO STC'NBERO 
NORMAN FEU • MYRNA LQY 


Sot and Sun at 1:30, 
6:06. 7:00 and O OO p.m. 
Woofch igM* at 7GO and 0:00 p.m. 

Data* 0:00. Show at Dual 
ATTRACTliM NM-ff OMLYi 
SPY WHO LOVED ME 



JUST WHEN YOU 
TN0U8NT IT WAS 
SAFE T8 68 BACK 
T6 THE MOVIES. 

PETER. ttUEtti* 

BLAKE EOWARM' 



fumt HRWtl LOM • RMtRT RIUIA _ 

«» RAN CANNON MOB* 
b* MINOT MAHON - TOUT ADAMX 

RANK MUMAH-ON ClttMUK EDWMtM 

V IU« iDNMK • Merit IUKC (DWMM 

VUmMMM 

COME EARLY! 

Saturday and Sunday at 1:30, 
3:18. 6:06, 7DO and 0:00 p.m. 
Waakwlpnta at 700 and tXJO p.m. 



i .< - 


A 


COME EARLY! 


IQflK 

8un.- 


at 6:00. 6:00 andKLOO 
Thura. at 7 and 0 p.m. 


J 













































































































Quality call sweeps China 


TOKYO (AP) - China ha* 
railed for a nationwide cam 
paign to produce better qua! 
itv goods to help promote fas 


ter development of its 
national economy, the Chi 
nese news agency Hsinhua 
said Friday. 


Bt’TCHART GARDENS — Now Open 9 a m to 10 p m 15 
acres of incredible beauty . . . Romantic after-dark illu 
ruination . . Ross Fountains in their majestic water 
ballet . Extraordinary Musical Fireworks Special 
entertainment for children . 6 different gardens fabu 
lous Sunken Garden, stately Italian, quaint Japanese, 
English Rose, Lake Garden and great Stage Show Garden 
. . plus the Begonia Bower, Show Greenhouse, fascina 
ting Seed and Gift Shop and the Dolphin Fountain. 

RESTAURANTS — The Butchart Dining Room 10 a m 
to 7:00p.m. Greenhouse Restaurant 10 a.m. lo 8 p.m. 

. . Coffee Bar always open. No reservations please. 

MAKE THE MOST OF YOUR VISIT — Come early, see 
the gardens by day, enjoy a delicious meal and a FREE 
show, then thrill to the magnificent evening illumina 
lions. 9 

MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY — The Butchart Garden 

ers provide musical fun for adults and children, 5.00 to 
7:30 p.m., followed by Walt Disney cartoons at dusk. 

SATURDAY - FIREWORKS! FIREWORKS! FIRE¬ 
WORKS! MAGICAL MUSICAL FIREWORKS - superb 

pyrotechnics from France, breathtakingly set to music 
After dark THE BUTCHART GARDENERS — 5:30 to 
7:30 p m . . MAGIC SHOW 7:45 p m 

SUNDAY — GRACE TUCKEY PUPPETS - 3:30 and 
4:30 p m . THE BUTCHART GARDENERS - 5 30 to 

7:30 p.m . MAGIC SHOW 7:45 p.m_WALT DISNEY 

CARTOONS at dusk 

THE BUTCHART GARDENS - A perfect way to enter 
tain yourself, your friends and visitors. 


STRATHCONA HOTEL — British Columbia’s largest 
night life centre, 919 Douglas St, 383-71ST, PRE¬ 
SENTS 

THE OLD FORGE CABARET — For your dancing 
pleasure, 0 nights a week — Live music featuring "THE 
BROTHERS FORBES k FRIENDS ’* Reservations until 
9:30 p.m , 383 7137. 

THE CUCKOO'S NEST LOUNGE - Full kitchen faci¬ 
lities serving outstanding lunches and dinners Featur¬ 
ing a unique 1952 MG TG Roadster salad and soup car. 
Dinner reservations 383:7137. Discotheque every night 10 
p.m. to 2 a.m. except Sunday. Enjoy the funky antique 
atmosphere 

"THE STING LOUNGE — Buffet luncheon and salad bar 
weekdays Prohibition Days atmosphere featuring Vic¬ 
toria's busiest discotheque 8 nights a week. Rated No. I. 

BIG BAD JOHN’S — Victoria's most famous lounge —r 
Crazy Hillbilly atmosphere and Country and Western 
music. 

IVY’S — A brand new Discotheque with a Patio Garden 
Atmosphere Located in the t^ld Forge (same entrance) 
8.30 p.m. to2 a.m. Mon Thurs. and 7:30 p.m to 2 am. Fri. 
and Sat. (formerly the Birmingham Bteycle Club and 
Boiler Room). Completely redecorated and refurnished. 
383-7137. 


THE RED LION INN — 3366 Douglas Street, 385 3366. 
Landmark of hospitality featuring: 

THE RED LION — TOWER LOUNGE"^ Live' entertain¬ 
ment nightly. Monday to Saturday featuring: "Trafal¬ 
gar ’ 

THE RED LION - LION’S DEN DINING ROOM — 
Open Monday to Saturday, 5:00 to 11:00 p m. (closed Sun 
day). 

THE RED LION - WINE CELLAR — N<R- fully II 
censed, open Mon to Sat. 12 noon 'til midnight. Buffet 
Luncheon Daily 12 noon to 2 p.m. A relaxing spot, 
overlooking the pool, backgammon table. Closed Sun 

day 

ENJOY THE RED LION’S OTHER FACILITIES - Cof 
fee Shop open Monday to Saturday til 10 pm Sunda> til h 
pm; and. for Hotel guests, a sauna and swirlpnol. 


SALMON - CHARTER GUIDE, BOAT RENTAL, family 
fishing, protected Saanich Inlet 652 1014 


FORTY THIEVES DISCOTHEQUE — CENTURY INN 
. welcome to the Forty Thieves Discotheque — official- 
|y rated Vancouver Island s No 1 Disco Victoria’s only 
total dance experience in an uptown Cabaret Atmosphere 
The only Disco with 3 different rooms and free attendant 
parking 8 30 p m 2 00 a m. daily AND FOR A DIFFER 
ENT TASTE EXPERIENCE, sizzle your tastebuds in our 
Oasis Dining Lounge, open daily for Breakfast, Lunch and 
Dinner. It s all happening at the Century Inn 603 Pandora 
Avenue at Government Street on Centennial Square 


McPHERSON PLAYHOUSE — Tonight — Live on Stage 
•TWO AND TWO MAKE SEX.” an hilariously funny 
British comedy with an added bonus after the show of 
Music and Songs "VICTORIAN VARIETIES ” A delight 
ful summer's entertainment. Tickets 64.50 and 65 50 
Curtain 8 p.m. Come and enjoy yourself.’ 


SALMON — SALMON — SALMON — 3 miles from town. 
Experienced guides; large boats. Fren tackle and coffee. 
598-3306 and 592 4164 


KINGS HOTEL — In the heart of Victoria ft OLD 
TOWNE”, 570 Yates St.. :$8)MB11 Completely redecorated 
with a friendly relaxed atmosphere slid glimpses of 
Victoria's colourful past: 

OFFERING — For your pleasure 
KINGS KITCHEN — Enjoy the really gfreat menu selec¬ 
tions — Homemade Soups. Scrumptious Baron of Beef, 
Tasty Hamburgers and especially "The Best Clam Chow 
der in Town”. Excellent food at reasonable prices. Mon 
to Sat. Daily 11 a.m -7 p.m 

KINGS PUB — Relax and enjoy Livf entertainment 12-2 
p m and 4-6 p.m dally. Mellow Organ sounds for easy 
listening and sing along 7-6 p.m. daily. Featuring Bunk 
and Addy — Nostalgia with piano and trumpet 

KING OF CLUBS DISCO - COME ON DOWN to this 
Disco "Hot Spot" — open Mon. to Sat. 9 p.m.-l a.m. 
Dancing to the Tops in Disco Sounds — No cover charge. 
You'll enjoy yourself' 


DA 

MP bugging case adjourned 

OTTAWA (CP) — The pro charged In connection with The men elected to be tru'd Their case is setto contir 
liminarv hearing for twq men the alleged bugging of Con- hy * county court judge with for two weeks beginning N< 


.DAILY COLONIST. Victoria. B C , Saturday. September 2. L97A 21 


FELICE f S DINING LOUNGE 

Gourmet Meal* 

Served in our elegant 6urrounding» overlooking 
VICTORIA'S BEAUTIFUL INNER HARBOUR 


Dinner 

7 Days a Week 
from 5:30 


Reservations 

315-4497 

tf II Wharf St 



CKDA 

PRESENTS 

Welcome Back 
Festival 

featuring 

‘ STONEBOLT” 

• and 

“FOSTERCHILD" 

8 p.m. 

Friday, September 8 

In th« 

Mamorial Arana 

Tickets available on the Bay a 
mem hoof 317 deportment 

Lucky number ticketa for 
terrific draw prizes now on 
tale in the Bey's mein floor 
317 department. 



charged in connection with 
the alleged bugging of Con 
servative MP Elmer MacK 
ay's office was adjourned 
Friday until November 

William Sandiford and 
Daniel McGarry, partners In 
Uniserv Sound and Signal 
Inc. of Toronto, a division of 
Centurion Investigations 
Ltd., appeared in provincial 
court this, week on charges of 
public mischief, illegal 
possession of an electronic 
listening device and attempt 
to defraud the Conservative 
party. 


The men elected to be tried Their case is set to continue 
by a county court judge with for two weeks beginning Nov. 
out a jury.^ 


1'uDsonS Bail Company 


HOLIDAY WEEKEND 

—SEPT, t OUNCE- 

MARTIN VAN 

QUARTET 
FEATUH1N8 VOCALS 
1 -IY CARMAN- 


Ent«rt*in wUS yeur (fiendt thla 
Labour Day Weafcend waicoftiing my 
Martin Van group to McMorron't 
bondOona Coman da Carlo tinging kit 
S language* Coat wmmar attiry 
watcomad (flat and jacket* aptionai) 
in thy Saawiaw Room (thy Island» 
tmatt my pi* floor i inttrumantphtt 
• AS P 38. dancing « 38-13 38 a m 


(TILL V A COUPLl 

I—S£PT I FUTUHIM—| 

1 DAVID FERNE 

1-WfTHMO KMEUMIMD-J 

MM*™* 




CHEZ PIERRE RESTAURANT 

French Cuisine at fta Finest 

512 Yates St (at Wharf St .) 

OPEN FOR DINNER 
Tuaaday to Saturday 
from 6 p.m. 
388-7711 


AUDUBON 

WILDLIFE FILMS 

33rd Season 197B-7T 

NEWCOMBE AUDITORIUM 

British Columbia Provincial Musoum 

Friday* and Saturday* — I o.m. 

October 13 and 14 — Thomas A. Starling 
"The Marsh — A Quiet Mystery'' 

November 10 and II — Grant Foster 
"Wilderness Trek Through New Zealand ' 

January 26 and 27 •# Tom Die* 

"Northwest Adventure* end 

Adventures in Penn'* Woods 

March 2 and 3 - Walter M tier let 

"American Hearlland* — The Great River Story" 

March 30 and 31 — Fran William Mall 

"Grassroots Jungle" 

Season Tickets: Adults *7 00 

Golden Age *5 00 

Single Admission; Adults: *J 75 

Golden Age STBS 

Student: *1 25 

Season tickets are now on sale at 
Gift Shop, Provincial Museum; 

James Bay Community Prolect, "The Mall." Slmco 
Borogrove Bookshop. Centennial Souare; 

Dogwood Gift Shoppe, Oak Bay Avenue; 

Bolen Books, Hillside Shopping Centre. 

Woodward's Book store, Maytair Shopping Centre. 

Victoria Natural Histery Society 
British Columbia Provincial Museum 


NORTH AMERICAN 
BODYBUILDING 
CHAMPIONSHIPS 

mcpherson playhouse 

SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 9th—8:00 p.m. 

(Pre-iudglng Event 1;00 pm) 

GUEST STARS 

★ MR. UNIVERSE ★ 

ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER 

★ MR. AMERICA ★ 

BOYER COE 

★ MR. WORLD ★ 

STEVE DAVIS 

BOOK NOW AT THE McPHERSON PLAYHOUSE 
CENTENNIAL SQUARE* VICTORIA 

ar Acted* Health CM 


MANDARIN 
PLACE 

Dining Lounge 


IN THE 

GORDON HEAD AREA 


Wide variety of debetoua 
oriental entreee expertly 
prepared tor your enjoyment! 

Air Conditioned 
and Fully Licenced 

OPEN: 

11:30-9:30 Mon.-Thure. 
11:30-1:30 Fri. and Set. 
11:30-9:30 Bun. 


EXCELLENT 


FREE HOT HOME 
DELIVERY 


MANDARIN PLACE 

1540 CEDAR HILL CROSS ROAD 

(Near Shelbourne in the Gordon Heed Area) 

721-3211 or 721-3212 



A 

£aa - 

THIS YEAR 

AT THI 

SAANICH 

FAIR 


'Pete% 

SHOW 

* with tpetijJ jue«f« 

Steve Kings, and 
The Peter Chipman Orchestra 

SAANICHTON FAIR GROUNDS 
SATURDAY, SEPT. 2ND 
8:00 P.M. 

Show Im luded with Admission to Grounds. 
Prodr* bv FanI Maatioti tor 

Prexliyc f.nurlalnnMH AhcikL* l.lJ 



jpaBstsaas 

110th Annual Fall 
Exhibition 

SAANICH f AIR 

(Saanichton Fair Grounds) 

•k Agricultural Exhibits ★ Midway 

★ Home Arts ★ Garden Product 
it Old Timo Farm Machinery 

★ Peter Chipman Show 

(Saturday — I pm) 

Ar Old Tima Farm Gamas 
Grounds Open 8 a.m. 

Sat., Sept. 2nd — Sun., Sapt 3rd 
Mon., Sapt. 4th — Labour Day 

Admission $1.50 Agee 13-15—759 

Children 12 and under FREE 

Direct Bus SDrvice to the 
Grounds available 
Call 652-3314 



MWtfTYVNWONS VAN *fTMAH toOOUCTK> 
riONAi JWdOONbANMAi. HOUSt JOHN KLUSMl TkMNVUKSOs OfN VPWO* 
VtONAQLOOM TMQMA5 HU.Cl end DONALD VUTHCftLAND 
Produced Uy WAlTY SnWONb and VAN ft£0WW MuKbriUAtOOtfWSTEiN 
HAROLD DOUGLAS KEMNEV U OW5 WUift D**cr*d by ©MN LAN06 

WARNING Occasional nudity, 
suggestive scenes; coarse language grf 

throughout. (B.C. Director)^® 

MATINtIB FBI., BAT., SUN. 

1:99, 3:30, 9:1 f jT 

NIGHTLY 7:10, few 


mr. amors 


at it's finest, 

lOUUT ft "SS 

if 

j** 


yW.-7p.v-: 

/ J JACQUESWI h J <^- 


■ M i"iy| T ' 

ilrl fi 


Parking 
After 5 P.M. 
ON THE 
WATLKFRONT 


1868 —Western Canada's —1978 
OLDEST AGRICULTURAL FAIR 
— EVERYONE WELCOME — 



(HIM lN«, llOttSI 


LONEUT HEARTS CLUB SAND" 


FBANDE BOWEBD FADL MCWOLAI 


STEVE MAITIN.._ 


AEROSMITH AIJCE COUPER 
EARTH. WIND h FIRE BILLY PR KSTnN 


GEORGE BURNS.*™ 

MjMr*#upoat>*«.[»Mcncn "timu 

810*01 I4ARTTU an - 


•ATDBDAY MATIN II 11 
NIGHTLY 7i9B, Bril 



l 

























































































































/ 


^2 DAILY COLONIST, Victoria, B.C.. Saturdt>. September I 


.*%*'*: 

^roror 5 *' 

OPENING SEPT. 5th 

at 2964 Richmond Avenue 

(Near Sean Shopping Centre) 

PRE-SCHOOL TO ADULTS 

• K.A.D. BALLET • /AZZ • TAB 

Exems — Recitals — Competitions 

Phone 592-4653 lor Information and Registration 


»• I VMS 

Transit losses 
sharing asked 




mm* 




AGES: 16 - 19 vr £ 

OPEN 7P.M. \ 

TUES.-SAT. & 



THIS SUNDAY ONLY 

BACK TO SCHOOL 
DANCE_ 


^FORMATION. 388 4432 

NO BLUEJEANS ON WEEKENDS 

FISGARD ST. across from the Bay 


DANCERS TEEN DISCO 


A POWERFUL EXPERIENCE YOU WONT FORGET! 



Consultants to the newly- 
created Urban Transit Au¬ 
thority have recommended 
that B.C. Hydro surcharges 
covering transit losses be 
shared equally by residential 
and business customers. 

A repo r * released by the 
authority Thursday says the 
surcharges should be collect¬ 
ed on a rale-pcr-meter basis 
rather than the present sys¬ 
tem based on how much 
power is used. 

Consultants and staff sug 
gested an initial charge of 
about $1.25 on a bi monthly 
Hydro bill, rising to about $« 
in the fifth year of UTA op 
erations. 


Marine 

Calendar 


NAVY 

At] ships tn port 

AAARINE SCIENCES 
Perueeo —Esquimau. 

Vector, Rictterdioo-Psi Bav 
Pandora 11 —Amundsen GuH 

COAST GUARD 

CamseW-Cambridoe Bav en rout* 
Gioa Haven 

Oouolss. Ready. Quadra—in port 
Racer—Bella Bella patrol area 
Rider—Caoe Scott patrol area 
Vancouver—on weather station 

» . MERCHANT MARINE 

Taiwan Phoenix—Esquimau 
Ivan Koflvarevsfciy—CroOon 
Da Verra/no—Nanaimo 
Star Heranoar—Gold River. 


live 4B 
; on 

V STAGE 


TAMAHNOUS 

THEATRE 


The UTA interim board 
tentatively accepted the staff 
proposals but will consult 
local governments affected 
by the charge before making 
a final decision at its next 
meeting Oct . 6. 

Local governments will be 
responsible for a share of 
transit deficits under the new 
transit organization to go into 
effect April L 
Property taxes, gasoline 
tax and power surcharges 
would be levied for transit 
deficits in 1982-83 or 1983-84. 

The UTA'board has recom¬ 
mended three transit service 
areas in the Vancouver re¬ 
gion. one for the Victoria 
Capital region and one each 
for 11 smaller communities in 
B.C. 


DIEF LOSES 
NINE TEETH 


OTTAWA (UP) -John Die 
fenbaker had nine teeth re¬ 
moved Friday as doctors at¬ 
tempted to deal with an 
infection and other problems 
that have kept the former 
prime minister in hospital for 
about two weeks. 


Bear shot, tourist fined 


HINTON. Alta. (CP) — A vacationing 
American paid $750 in fines and lost his 
pistol in provincial court after slaying a bear 
In Jasper National Park recently. 

Jasper RUMP said David Blanton of St. 
Louis, Mo., was angered by a black bear. 


called non aggreslve by park officials, 
which stole the tourist's steak at a campsite 
near the Columbia ice fields. 

Blanton pulled out a pistol and shot the 
bear in the neck as it was running off with 
the moat. 


From drugs, 
crime, prison 
and near suicide 
to one of the 
world's renowned 
speakers! 

THE PLACE: SACRED HEART CATHOLIC CHURCH 

4040 Naithorpa (oft McKanzie) 

THE DATES: STARTING SEPT. Sth 
THE TIME: EVERY EVENING AT 7:30 P.M. 

. BRING A FRIEND • ALL SEATS FREE! 



RESTAURANT V 
AND DINING LOUNGE 

(formerly Poodle Dog Restaurant) 

SPECIAL HOLIDAY 
FAMILY DINNERS 

SATURDAY: 

Shrimp Salad 


DGMEirr and TEA 
OR COFFEE 


ONLY 


•4.25 


OR 


ONLY 


•4.95 


Beef Curry 

Served with *oup or salad, lice, vege 
table. EaM Indian bread, coffee or 
lea and jetty 

SUNDAY: 

Halibut Steak 

Nerved with soup or xalad. boked p<> %JR Q Q 

lato, vegetable, coffee or tea and jelly ONI.Y *fti«lw 

* OR 


Chicken Curry 


Srrved with *oup or naiad, rice. 

lable. Kanl Indian bread, coffee or lev M Q C 

and jelly ONLY 4*93 


MONDAY: 

Salmon Steak 

Served with aeop or Mind, baked n 
le, vegetable, coffee or lea aod jel 


flSr only *4.95 

OR 

Shrimp Curry 

Servad with Wop er naiad, rice, vegr- ' 

table. Eaat Indian bread, coffee er e* OK 

tea aod jell). ONLY 4. tfO 

SUNDAY — MONDAY MORNING 

BREAKFAST SPECIAL 


2 ejuca aay atyle, bam. baab I 
toant, too er coffee. 

Served I a m III II a.m. 


•2.25 


Dinner Served from ) J to I** 
Reservation* * Recommended 

1241 GOVERNMENT ST. 0 


Open Dolly 
A a.m. tn ifcat p. 


k LIGHT, COMFORTABLE 
* AND EASY TO MOVE 



SOFAS 
CHAIR BIDS 
CUSHION SALE 
Lfl.ll to S5.N 


517 YATES ST. 



JADE PALACE RESTAURANT 

ntSEHTS 

SOFT LIVE JAZZ . bv vista FRIDAY .nd Saturday 

4 P M to 2:00 A.M 


TUESDAY. SEPT. 12tb 

8 P.M. 

Victoria Memorial Arana 

Ticneta available at HHtaide 
Mail and Arena Box Office m 
$• 50. $7 50. $i.50 

fjrst ot The Legend Senes 
Produced by Peul MeactoP tor 
frvminc Enu-rtaionMN l.iJ. 


1 


Victoria's Newest 
Restaurant Featuring 
Chinese Cuisine 

For Reservations 
Phone 388-4412 

LUNCHES 

served trom 11 a.nt. to 3 p.m. daily 

INTRODUCING 
THE DIM SUM LUNCHEON 
Saturday. Sunday 
and Holidays 
11 a.m. to 3 p.m. 




ON THE MEZZANINE 
IN 

MARKET SQUARE 

Zil-%0 lohnvon 
corner of Store Streei 

388-4412 

DINNER 

Mon -Thurs. from 5 until 1 a m 
Friday & Sat. trom S until 2 a m. 
e Sun and Holidaw 
from 5 until 9 p m. 


FREE HOME DELIVERY 


WITH MINIMUM ORDER 
AFTER 5 P.M. 


“LIQUID GOLD” 


SET ON THE SUNSHINE 
COAST 

WM Mod Wheeler, the power 
hungry cannery owner, sue 
fn naming The dependent 
flsherfofk of his community to 
the life of credit? 

the dashing rum-runner 
Moon Morgan outwit the U S 
Coast Guard hot on his trait? 
What is the secret dream that 
R C M P constable Lance 
Harker is afraid to reveal 9 
Discover the answers to these 
and many other ridiculous 
questions at 

LIQUID GOLD 

at Iks 

McPherson puvhouse 

September 13 and 14 

8 P.M. 

Tickets: $4.80. $6 SO and U 
are avertable at the McPhereon 
Box Office. HMetde Ticket Centre 
end el the door Cherpea accept 

ed 

McPhereon Pteyhooee •• operated 
by the McPhereon Foundation 
non-profit Society dedicated to the 
lAito. 


TWO AND TWO 
MAKE SEX 

A Haw Britlt* Canady 

•4 RrPkarina DlaukaJu 

■I MCfTMnoR niynousi 

Aug. 23,24, 

25. 29. 28. 20, 30, 31 
Sept. 1-2 et • P.M. 

piui victonM vinnies 

THUR8., FRI. avid BAT. 

—entertainment after the show 
m the mezzanine lounge ting 
along and have a bit# to eat 
no cover charge. 

Tickets available at McPnarson 
Playhouse or Hillside Mall 
presented by 

Vtctone Actors Assoctehon 


THE BIG WEEKEND! 

OPEH 10 A.M. T010 P.M 

EVERYONE COME 



HIGHWAY 17 and VANALMAH 

Par Hoi May Waakand Pun Ttmaa 


John Elio and Julia Docza 

are pleased to announce 

THE 

ELEGANT FARMER 

DELICATESSEN 

IS NOW OPEN 

in tha Now Cadar Hill Mall 

1551 Cedar Hill X Road 


Complete Line of Cold Cuts and 
Cheeses, etc. 

We Also Specialize in: 

• Smoked Hungarian Sausage 
• Head Cheese • Cabbage Rolls 
• Bar-B-Q Spare Ribs 

• Chicken Kiev 

o 

- JUST TAKE HOME, 

HEAT AND BON APPETITE ’ 
721-3822 

We welcome everyone to drop in and 
eee ua in our new etore. 



look it up- 
the price just 
went down. 



Scribner Bantam 
English Dictionary 

Funk & Wagnalls 
Standard Desk 
Dictionary 

New Webster 
Encyclopedic Dictionary 


Original Edition 
Published at 

$12.50 

$14.95 


Now 

only 


$6M 

$599 


l 


$39 95 $1499 


$5995 $2999 


Webster's Twentieth 
Century Dictionary 

Celebrating 50 Classic Years. 

Classic Bookshops-the student’s bookshop! 


Belmont Building. 620 Humboldt St. 383-6122 


ESQUIMAU REC. CENTRE 


527 FRASER STREET 


ur- 


386-6128 


SEPTEMBER 5.1978 - 7:00 p .m. to 9:30 p.m. 


RscmtlM Prtffies 

Aquatics 

Girl Oitdas 

Fl«iin SkitiRi 

Synckronizwl Swimming 

Brownlas 

Spilt Skatlii 

Curling 

Botvin 


Ftstir Parent 

Cult 

Btrls Heckey 

Silver Thrtadi 

Scouts 


A0UATICS and RECREATION PROGRAM 
REGISTRATION 

SEPTEMBER 5.1978 - 7:00 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. 

and 

SEPTEMBER 6 Md 7.1978 

9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. 


r 


AQUATIC PROGRAMS 

RECREATION PROGRAMS 

Tati MmH«| laataas 

Aru 

FltHu* 

M Cron Louoas 

Crafts 

Athletics 

Strati DaWapwat Land 

Daocc 

Prtfraet for tka 

Lllaanlai 

Sprint hart OI«la$ 

Catting 

Haedieipped Child 


THERE AMI A LOT OF PROGRAMS THIS FALL. 
SO COMB IN AND PICK UP A BROCHURE 


/ 


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I 





l>* 




/ 



DAILY COLONIST. Victoria. B C . Saturday, s*pt«»mb*r 2. ia7i 23 




M. V. Chesnut’s 

Garden Notes 




The earlier varieties of apples are 
ripening nicely now, and one character¬ 
istic of these early trees Is that they 
ripen their fruits a few at a time — 
usually those at the top of the tree 
first. 

This piecemeal ripening is really a 
fortunate state of affairs for the home 
gardener, for all the early varieties are 
poor keepers and cannot be stored for 
any great length of time. If it were not 
for this obliging habit of the tree in 
doling out its harvest' we would be faced 
with the prospect ot eating up a whole 
treeful of apples in a matter of a few 
weeks. 

It is best to go over your early apple 
tree every few days, picking the ripest 
for immediate use and perhaps a few 
green ones for pies, but leaving the rest 
to mature In their turn. To test apples 
for ripeness, place the flat of the hand 
under the fruit and lift it gently to just a 
little above the horizontal position. If 
the apple is ripe, the stalk will part 
readily from the spur of wood. If it 
doesn’t come away readily of Its own 
accord, lower the apple just as gently 
and try it again a few days hence. 

The turn of the season often brings in 
its wake a series of boisterous wind 
storms, and these can often cause con¬ 
siderable loss of fruit from our trees. In 
previous years these losses could be 


minimized by spraying with one of the 
hormone anti-drop chemicals such as 
Stop-Dron, Planoflx or Fruitone, but 
this year these products have been or¬ 
dered off the market for reasons un¬ 
known to me. 

The method used by our forefathers 
was simply to strew a good thick layer 
of straw under the tree to cushion the 
fall, and just let ’em drop. 

Windfalls mustn’t be allowed to re¬ 
main on the ground under the trees, 
though, for each one is a potential 
source of infection for the tree, or a 
happy and comfortable home for over¬ 
wintering pests. During the fall clean¬ 
up, If you can’t get rid of them any other 
way, they should be composted or 
buried deeply. I should point out. 
though, that even bruised windfalls can 
be made into an apple wine of consider 
able horsepower. 

* * * 

There seems to be some confusion in 
the minds of my readers on the proper 
time to pick squash. With the kinds 
known as summer squash, it doesn't 
matter, for these kinds cannot be stored 
for any length of time anyway; in fact, 
the smaller you pick ’em. the better 
t^iey taste. 

For instance, with the Zucchini and 


Art 

Buchwald 




Cocozelie squash, which make enor 
mous fruits if allowed to grow full size, 
the preferred size for the table is only 
seven or eight Inches long. The new and 
delicious Scallopini, which can grow to 
the size of a dinner plate, is harvested 
when only three inches in diameter 
These immature fruits, produced in sue 
cession all summer long, can be sliced 
raw into salads or steamed unpeeled 
and served whole, either with butter, 
salt and pepper or In a cream sauce. 

It is a different story with the winter 
squash. These need to be approaching 
maturity for best flayor. and they must 
be completely matured if they are to be 
stored for winter use. Varieties include 
Hubbard. Acorn. Butternut, Buttercup. 
Turban, Uconn. Rainbow and Delicata. 
and all these "keeping" kinds will go 
mouldy and rot in storage if picked too 
soon. 

One pretty good indication of maturi 
ty is the stem, which should have a dried 
and withered appearance. Another is 
the hardness of the skin — you shouldn t 
be able to dent it with your thumbnail. 

After picking, winter squash — and 
ornamental gourds — should be 
"cured” by keeping them in a very 
warm room for two weeks, ideally be 
iween 25 and 30 degrees C., then trans 
ferrfng them to a cool, dry basement for 
winter storage 




WASHINGTON - The won¬ 
derful thing about American 
industry is that it rises to 
every challenge. Even some¬ 
thing as distasteful as infla 
tion has not discouraged most 
manufacturers. The solution 
to the problem is not in the 
product but in the package. 
Rather than raise the prices 
on many goods, American in 
dustry is devising new 
methods to make the product 
smaller, while making the 
package Urge In this way. 
the customer feels assured 
that nothing has changed. 

I visited one of the largest 
packaging companies in the 
country the other day to see 
how they were doing It. The 
vice-president in charge of 
inflationary design took me 
around the plant 

"We re going 24 hours a 
day,” he said proudly. 
"Everyone is asking us for 
new designs to help them get 
through this rough period." 

I noticed women in while 
smocks working with tweez¬ 
ers under microscopes. 

’What are those women 
doing?" I asked. 


"Those are 15-cent choco¬ 
late bars in their tweezers. 
They put each one in that 
large aluminum foil and then 
they wrap wax paper around 
It. Over the wax paper they 
put the name of the chocolate 
bar in large letters. Here's 
one that's finished.” 

"Why. from the outside it 
looks like an old-fashioned 
chocolate barf" 

"No one can tell the differ¬ 
ence until the package is 
op ened," he said proudly. 

We went into another part 
of the building. There were 
air hoses hanging all over the 
ceiling and boxes were roll¬ 
ing along a conveyor belt. 

I looked perplexed 

“We’re packaging soap 
flakes in here," he shouted 
above the din “The lady 
down at the beginning of the 
line puts one teaspoonful of 
soap flakes into one of those 
giant-sized boxes; then those 
men over there with the hoses 
pump air into the rest of the 
box.” 

"How ingenious!’' 1 shouted 
back. 


"The bottom of the box is 
weighted with very heavy 
cardboard so no one will 
know, when picking up the 
box. how many soap flakes 
there are in it.” 

"That’s a lot of air to put in 
a box.” 

"We don’t use the air for 
only soap flakes. We also use 
it for cereals, baking prod¬ 
ucts and anything that comes 
in a box. 

"Let me show you this in¬ 
vention which we have a pa¬ 
tent on. This is a see-through 
wax paper window for noo¬ 
dles. Well, when you look at 
it, you think you're getting a 
full box of noodles Right?” 

"Of course.” 

"Why, the only noodles in it 
are stuck to the window." I 
said in amazement. 

"Yep. The windows and the 
noodles are magnetized. 
When the window fills up with 
noodles, the box moves on.” 

"Are those frozen TV din 
ners over there?” 

•They certainly are. They 
look like complete dinners, 
don’t they?” 


"You bet.” 

"Now. look under the tray. 
You see how it’s indented? 
There's nothing in the tray 
but what you see on the 
top.” 

"Fantastic,” I said. 

He took me into another 
building which had a large 
sign, PHARMACEUTICALS, 
on the outside. "This is where 
we work on hew packaging 
for medicines." He opened a 
door, and everywhere 1 
looked were large mounds of 
white cotton 

"What do you do with that 
stuff?" I asked. 

"We put two pills in each 
bottle and stuff the rest of it 
with white cotton. If ii 
weren't for cotton. I don t 
think the drug industry would 
survive." 

"You people think of everv 
thing.” 

"Not everyting. Our dream 
is to devise a package fille«. 
with nothing but air, cotton 
and aluminum foil. If you 
bought one. you’d get a sec 
ond package free." 


Sydney 

Harris 


A recent study, commissioned by the 
U.S. Justice Department, of two coun¬ 
ties In California and one In Oregon, 
confirmed what I have been prating 
about In print for years, to no avail. 
Maybe the time has finally come. 

It has long seemed to me that the 
bare alternatives of jail or fines are 
inappropriate and Ineffectual for many 
types of law offenders. A jail term is 
often too severe, while a fine is often 
meaningless. In such cases, all a judge 
could do was hand down a suspended 
sentence 

Now. the study shows, a form of 
sentencing in which offenders do com¬ 
munity work is becoming increasingly 
popular around the country for minor 
offenses. Some of the examples cited 
tickle my fancy: 

Executives of a meat-packing com¬ 
pany convicted of criminal violations 
were sentenced to provide 200 hours of 
service to a youth training program and 




also to hire parolees in the firm's job¬ 
training program. 

A drunk and disorderly defendant 
was remanded to help with the coqnty 
parks’ public works program. 

A taxi driver was required to provide 
the poor with 40 hours of transportation 
to medical facilities. 

An errant carpenter was commis¬ 
sioned to build a wheelchair ramp at a 
home for senior citizens 

A cleaning shop owner, guilty of 
petty larceny, was sentenced to provide 
$250 worth of cleaning services for des 
titute Inmates of a nursing centre. 

Youths convicted of scrawling graf 
fiti in public places were formed into a 
"clean-up squad" to remove all such 
offending defacements 

Community service is surely a con¬ 
structive and productive way to deal 
with perhaps as many as half of the 
non-dangerous lawbreakers who troop 


James Bacon’s 

Hollywood 


X«»;«0 8 l0 H M8 H l0 B 888B60 8 68C0CflB0»QQiaQ04Q0CWWOOO<»CCCC00eOflOfl0&a08 :6 C' C 9C08C« 


HOLLYWOOD - Maybe 
it’s the heat but the stars who 
are dead seem to give better 
parties around town than the 
live ones. 

Dr Kenny Kingston, our 
resident psychic, held a se¬ 
ance the other night at Mali 
bu and got an even better 
turnout than Frank Mantra’s 
opening at the Universal ^m- 
pi theatre 

Everybody was (here but 
Elvis Presley who. so far. 
hasn’t joined the spirit world. 
Elvis has been dead a full 
year now. 

Cllften Webb, who never 
misses Kenny's parties, said 
no one up there has been 
able to contact Elvis. 

"He’s still resting." Clifton 
reports. 


Occasion for the seance 
was the 16th anniversary of 
Marilyn Monroe’s death. 
Kenny said his 16 guests were 
scared out of their wits when 
she appeared amidst thunder 
and lightning everyplace. 

Speaking of Sinatra’s open 
ing, Mario Lanza told Kenny 
he took Tallulah Bankhead 
over to the amphitheatre. 

Mario !• so loyal, ha sat 
right behind Lew Waaaermaa 
who was hia agent In the 
old days. t 

"I didn’t even take ten per 
cent of his seat." said Mario, 
injecting a little note of 
humor Into the seance. 

IJU came with Jeaa Har¬ 
low and predicted a "shock 
Ing situation” fclthin six 
months at Casa Pacifica at 


San Clemente. That won’t be 
the first time LBJ has haunt¬ 
ed Richard Nixon. 

Franklin Delano Rooeevelt 
came with Rosalind Russell. 

I ask you. Has the Bistro or 
Chasen’s ever had a party 
with such a guest list? 

FDR shocked the seance by 
revealing that. If his coffin 
were opened, no body would 
be found. 

The Second World War 
president said he waa already 
gone by December, 1144. 
Which meena. If tnie, that an 
Impoator sat in the While 
House until April. 1MI. 

Stranger things have hap¬ 
pened during a war. FDR 
said not even fUrry S Tra¬ 
ms* knew what w«» going 
on. , 


into the courts. I would like to see the 
concept extended to the traffic violators 
and speeders, who account for 50.000 
fatalities a year and millions of injuries 
on the public roads. 

Fining these people is pointless and 
non-corrective. Making them do some 
work over a period of time is far more 
sensible, and gives the opportunity for 
real penitence, which a fine does not 

Even illegal parkers, who are the 
biggest pain in a big city, and create the 
worst traffic tie-ups at rush-hours, 
should be subjected to the chastisement 
administered by the police in Yugosla 
via, who simply deflate one, two, three, 
or all four tires, depending upon how 
flagrant the parking violation is. 

Our present system deters neither 
criminals nor scofflaws. and makes 
money the measure of justice. Sentenr 
ing would impose a meaningful hard 
ship on the malefactor and a service 
benefit to the community 


Bogey usually shows up at 
these things but Clifton said 
he was still wandering down 
Rodeo Drive In Beverly Hills 
trying to re-open the old Ro¬ 
manoff’s. 

Making her first-time ap¬ 
pearance at one of Kenny's 
seances waa Jtan Crawford, 
who reports It’s wonderful 
meeting old friends like Ga¬ 
ble and Spencer Tracy. She 
said she’* evenforgiven 
Franc hot Tone, her ex-hus¬ 
band. 

Joan adds that if she had 
her life to live over, she would 
not be such a perfectionist 

Gary Ceeper showed up 
with Line Vile;, an old ro¬ 
mance that once was Holly 
wood's hottest. 


r 


/ 












































































































































































21 


DAILY CUI.UMS1, Victoria B e' , SaiuiTiay. .Seplfiubci ?, 1978 


[ 386-2121 

| Haadav ihrnffl FiHav I • ■ »• I f m. 

■y I >.■. f l:» >■■■ 


CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING 

Vancouver Island's Largest Shopping Centre in Print 


386-2121 

r tfragh PrMaf I ■ ■ H i p m. 
—4ay 1 *■. f l:H p.«. 


CLASSIFIED 

RATES 

ADVERTISING 

^TaarRiirc^ 

* ,TI '' ■ TH* *l» 


CLASSIFICATION 

INDEX 


I BIRTHS 

A R nTdORF—MARYLO U 


COMING EVENT* 
uml MLLUMiS 


VITAL STATISTICS 
r.' 1 Births 

4 I Card! of Thank* 


-MARYLOU AND ._ —- 

MAPPBNINO VIC- 

.•am a 
' MUg ta&jg 


I HELP WANTED 
GENERAL 

UNIVERSITY OF VICTORIA 


HELP WANTED 
GENERAL 


ill 


HELP W ANTED 
GENERAL 


itt 


HELP WANTED 
GENERAL 


Itt 

| LEGAL 


require* 

r-TIMt TlACH 
ASSISTANT 


.taff at Royal Jutjiloo t^ s ^ ” HI .t tne dance. 

•' Hll 


. 

LASSIFIBD 


BOERMANN — Twllah and her 
parents announce the birth ot\~z^ ^. rt - 7 ^. 
|- Harlay Raa. born * >rc *°' * ,oowv e,c 


are 54 each person at th* 
^ Mall, box Office. W p.m" 
"T-., 344 - 57*9 or 594-3479 Sin* 

vat rwH Rild/WM Rtr Aam 


REGULAR CLASSIFIED 
PRIVATE*PARTY ONLY 

t« word mmtmum 
1 or 1 days 
14c per word oar day 
3 to » cowaac u ttva day* 

11 . 30 c par word par dav 
4 consecutive day* «f more 
9.90c par ward Par day 

All raai estate, mobile Pama, NOTICiS 
rantal and busmeu advartlalna »« U Announcement* 
considered la b# eemmerciat ad- tS Comma Event* and 
~ cMfit a *,• - 


Sinaia*. 

;*^^ «orTtrl» ti^? "I 

•«™ M anqotner Doctor* OAK BAY LIONS BINGO 
20 Reg. Games — 7 p.m. 


and staff ot Victoria General 


|fM Card* of Thank. 
X* In Memertems 
1 310 Funeral Director* 
,311 Monumental* 

313 Florist* 
j 313 Miaceiianeou* 


COULL — torn to Ron and Aiy*on 
lnot Fisher), a Qiri Hither Eli¬ 
zabeth, I lbs a ot on August 
i9th 197B. A sister tor Jeffrey 
Many thanks to Dr. R. Skaret 
and /Maternity staff at Ro>at 
Jubilee 


6 Cards $2 
Extra Games 5 cartls for SI 
./_O.A.P 


PH©? SCHOOL OF SOCIAL WORK 
aside 

or phone JO* DESCRIPTION; On# - third 
di- time. September 10 to April 10, 
93 1979 , to serve m a leaoer and 
resource parson to waaklv seminar 

bran* In the Ldw and Sx.ei 
Service course, halpino students 
work toeafher -to accomplish the 
course objectives end meet their 
leering needs. This include* pre 
vitfing Information on course con 
• ^ dinating 


FIRE FIGHTER 
(INSPECTION DIVISION) 
foe the 

CITY OF VICTORIA 
FIRE DEPARTMENT 


tent ana co-ordi 


Come and 


Full 


•ccerdtnsiv. 

REGULAR CLASSIFIED 
CoSuMBRCIAL ADVERTISING 
10 word minimum 
1 or 2 day* 
lie per word ter dav 
3 t* S consecutive dav* 
14.30c par word per da y 
i or more consecutive days 
12.3K per word per day 


Gordon and LRtda 
parens.) that 1 am 


____in« fiaK* trip, 

OUALIFKARONS: 1 The sctc^h.1 
candidate will be a member In 

_• r ci . pood standing of the leaal crinclai 

to Social*'Credit Sarty'^Sanada. on lefLa'otTnter* 

R3 »wrtt.1 felP&r Hourly Wage Plus!! 

arrived '•« SI. In non-urpsn communitigd. Teach 

- ---- - --gariant 


WOMEN 
MEN 

STUDENTS 

Pleasant 

qi __Fire Prevention Officer, to carry 

rhone Work out tnaageftons of commercial, in¬ 
dustrial and residential properties 
\i/v \ ' *« onsuro comolianc* with Munici- 

NO ERpenesce Necespiry Ml , Tovincisi. and Federal fir# 


OFFICE HELP 

SECRETARY 
vlen 


1 * * 1 

Avon Asks... s * rr 


Salary 

rates) 


_ 0979 

___ aeon quaMtca- 

and experience. 


[WANT TO EARN EXTRA S^^&wood igei".xp^ 
'MONEY AFTER SCHOOL? WppnHpIc yS tf&'YPi'" 
It you're 18 or over, -n __ 


part<time a, an Avon Rapra- gli^V £gW E i,J? 

■ 473-9540 tor appointment 


{tentative. Fun products for * 


teens too! No selling experi- « s 
ence nccmiry. Call 
384-7345. 


SRTLLED TRADER 


or Port Time 

9-2 or 4-9 


I 17 Restaurants 
11 Places to visit 
1 X Last and Found 

EMPLOYMENT 
21 Help Wanted - General 
; 22 Office Help 
, 23 Skilled Trade* 

24 Salts Parson* and Agent* 

23 Teacher* 

74 Part Time—Temporary Help 
M Employment Service 
SBMI-OI£*j£r X Situation* Wantad 

Any advarhaamant which varies BUSINESS SERVICES ANG 
Wfc'WBlSl O...CTO.Y 

14 agate line* par column Inch ' 

1 or 2 days 


»ul assistance* of Drs. 

Otmr, RwKSl Hunter. HPttH 

rison and Nurse Joan Bennett, 
am lookina forward to mettir 
my playmates Pepe, Tobie 
Bird ll. 


r. n Jtr i cmntu jin. int 

Clothes Hangar Plus, good second 
■ Pr * vOS1 hand clothes and houtehold ite.rs 


ing axperTance Is an asset. 
STIPEND of 4X500 (Inc* 


— - — — - - - fits) AddL 

hand clothe* and houtehold ite.rs |. m K Cr a 
at prices everyone can afford at wor>T University of JVHHH 
JJ i te’si'SdS 1 9 5£5 d » MOUr4 VkSorlT B-C. V3W 


Sep- 


ly before 3:00 o.m ... 


HYSTAO - Born to Bud and 


l« CATERING, | 
and RECEFHON 


t Danielle, 
r Crytte. 




GEORGES BAVARIAN 

banquet facilities 


ASSISTA* 1 

BANQUETS Exoendlng western C4|»tedten cor 
ON ROOMS ’0 accte? WPonaflSftiiy 

for pradueften pUnnlng, sales pro¬ 
motion and otner eesociated proi 
ects Preference given “ — 


Apply 
Shopping Spree 
201-727 Johnson Si 
between 9-5 


SALES 

REPRESEN l AT1VES 

REQUIRED IN VICTORIA 
Leading Tocacco Manufac¬ 
turer -- - . 

Tilts machanl 


regulations and to ensure adequate MCDONALDS RESTAURANT, 
standards of tTre wfety ere main -1 vWi0Wt available. 4-7' -, 

tamed. Considerable public contact! hour*, daytime and evening. Apptv 
is mvoyed while interpreting fire | n person Saturday from 2-3 p.m. 
prevention rgdutattona and present- 156 rCedar Hill X Rd. 

, ing educational lectures to various I---- --— __ - - 

mterasted groups. 'OPERATOR NEEDEO FOR 

power vac furnace cleaning truck 

Applicants should have Grade 17 in Greater Victoria. No experience , 
, education or equivalent and be necessary, year round work, o 000 

P tenda^s *° m#,% *** p#v ' ^ 


ADVERTISEMENTS IN 
THIS CLASSIFICATION 
MUST COMPLY WITH 
THE 

BRITISH COLUMBIA 
HUMAN RIGHTS ACT 


isnsursa. ’■ubsr 

v.ith the B.C. Fire Marshal’s AO h 

vSX * ■ 




«Kitr v - 

Should algo have the obTiHy to 
read /.orking drawings mcludlnp 
te mlcal J — — ~tt 


British Columbia 
Forest Products Limited 


drswlnEt. end draw¬ 


ings snowing Are alarm and firs 
protection systems. Ability te write 


45c per agate line ter dav 

3 to S consecutive day* 
31.30c par agate line per day 
« or more consecutive days 
S2c par agate lint >ar day 


S5im4X« .at. 

a&srrfAtr 

14 agate I met per column Inch 


BIRTH NOTICES 

UP to 30 words S3 75 
Each additional word i« 


PERSONAL SERVICES 

33 Travel 

33 Bands. Musician* and 
Orchestras 

34 Pro-Recorded Music 
40 Business Personals 

42 Education 

43 Dancing 

71 Musk Teachers 
39 Personals 
32 Trad# Schools 


JACQUOT — Born to Berme _ 
Elly (nee Tapper) on Augi 
14 th. 1971. at Royal Jubilee h, 

eftal p bov Dale Barnard. 9 t_ 

10 on. Many thanks to Dr. Nv 
iff. Dr. Vaughan. Dr. Coiewe i 
and the maternity staff 

P O DfrO RCNKO - Born 



Call far appointment._ 

WANTED: BABYSITTER IMME-| 
diately for 1’v-year-old, part-time 


t&JSV 


my mace. Glespow 


VARIOUS POSITIONS FROM. 12.50 ■ 
per hour, 12 full time, 4 part time, , There are 
lively, wail dressed people, call vacancies 
335-4442. 


Sawmill and 
Pulp Workers 


LABOUR DAY 
BUFFET 


Robin Podjiorenko”end Tim Bou- 53 93 a parson st the Hotel Doug- Sarw^eteti'*' snd 'th^ opportunity, 
dreau on August 14th 1973 a girl Its Maple Room. From 12-3 a.m.' tr.ntler to varteus pads of 

Taint tyjhFif* wflpha 3 jbg io manomaoe caterThg ^nJJST w* n# vou _adv^ - 


- J R» 10 HANOAAADe CATERING Canada while you advance. 

Sam' Poctoot'irko aKi BLAp C PRINCE CATE9UI9G ( ff74» 

*u^lanv *-- ■ 


ttBurantB. „ 

ANO CAROS OP THANKS 

54c ter count line per d*v 
3 consecutive dav* 

41.SO par count line par day 

PRIVATE BOX NUMBERS 

Sj.25 except Help Wantad Ad- 
vartisamant, S3.00 which includes 
a Position Filled Advertisement 


MERCHANDISING 

S3 Aircraft 

117 Antiques and Arte 
71 Bicycles 
so Boats and Marina 
*3 Building Supplies 
93 Camaras. Supplies and 
Photo Finishing 
127 Chicks. Poultry. Hatching 
Eggs. Supplies 
101 Childrens Miscellaneous 
133 Farm implement* 

*0 Fuel 

_ 97 Furnltur# 

-- . , 120 Garden SuPPltea 

Centred ratee ter lacal basin***#* „ Groceries. Meats and Produce 
IX Heavy Equipment and 
Machinery 

123 Livestock, Suppiiea and Events 
100 Misce'lentous for Sale 
i(D Miscellaneous Wanted 
K» Miscellaneous to Rant 
77 Motorcycles 

REGULAR CLASSIFIED adv*r- ! Musical Instrument* 
tisiiG may be Placed ‘ntj* Daily 125 Pats and Suppi.es 
Colonist up to 3 p.m. the dav 94 proves a v Furnacaa 

VSJTjStaWZ *sf!2; « **«". o»« 

day prior to publication. 11 sa boats 

sTSSS ai?L. 

to publication. 


Tanya Lyim. 5h# w*.o» 
o/s. Th* first grandChl 

and Mrs Sam Podaorenko and 1 - 

Mrs M BmcfreaunCiany tn.nks , *43 Douglas St 
to Dr. McCordtc and the staff of f <* «M your cater.na needs m our 
V.G.H. roof top Queen* Recap*ion Room 

— , jt on your premise*. 

REIMER — Tim and Afiary (not---““ 

Conners) are proud to announce Jf LOST aad FOUND 
the fast arrival of their first son. *** 

Shaun Norman, weighing I lbs. FOUND YOUNG FRIENDLY 
°yf greT and whit* cat at corner Qua 


PART TIME PIANO TEACHER 
INQUIRED TWO OAYS A WEEK 


swir 

Rknmond, E.C. 

V3X 1X5 

Attention: W. Biondnam 


Han. _ _ 

Thursday. TEACHER 
t Part-time 


WANTED DRIVER OR 
owners, with Of wk 
Empress Taxi, 337-3314. 


a number of ufii:t/ 

____ within our InduStrai 

! complex at Mackaruia Aopllcanw 
must be matura. staoie individuals 
desire and abilit y 




/ Xtih, 


^BUILOHMG 

AND 

LICENCE CLERK 


DRIVER . who posse* th*__ 

car, s 0 «dvanc# to a more *dnior voi 
tion wtfhln division, f vdt qua i- 
, FT fv. wq can offer you: 

1. A starting salary of J7.11-ho-' 
®° v 1 plus shift differential P*v 2. A 

_comprehensive benefit package 

MATURE LIVE-IN HOUSE KEEP- which Includes lit# insurance, mad 
er companion for ladq i« cifv. Wa- Uai and dental coveraot. plus a 
terfront bungalow. S9»-7140. 1 notvaccupattanel accident 


special thanks to Dr D J dra'andV 

Gardner. Dr Hunt and Royal - 

jubilee Maternity staff. 


DEATH and 
FUNCHAL 
announcements 
OICCCTLY 

following 

CLASH FI ID 


.4 ill side, 11:30 a.m. Thurs 
day. S.F.C.A registration 3244 or 
call Karfott et 477-1341 or 452 2594 

LOST GOLD BRACELET BE- ’ 
tween FalrfiaM vines 
Bay along *aterfronl _ 

-7744. 


Queen Margaret's _ 

450 Browttgev Am 
D uncan. B.C 
V9L1C1 

TEL 744-4135 . 

CHANDELLE FASHIONS 

tram you 


CARETAKER REQUIRED 
This 30 auite block rwads Po ^ 1(OW __ 
c.xwiderable upgnulin* raiatad 

A bonus incentive ayitem inIg^Mning* n Nipn. ^tocMtcGrva C an4Mr* 1 

“F ■£“ ““ JT "<**■ c "‘ 

wiute for the nght couiie. 


Kerfott at « Won. rHANnrai£ KASHIUNS A^jiy staung previous cs+m- iKui*, ipiHte 

along ablertranl. Sent.mantai m 9 designs by Terri, one of Cane- Vitoria Ptobp, Box 874. mg and raiatad cades 

value A*"*rd 334-7754. da's leading designer* of welting __ 

casual# and evening co-ordinates -—— -_—- jRaqu.rad gugilfjca ions 

'S$urs& »yw!»*.g»yMl ..WfMMTWNWE. 

t^^o^Sa^ASk 41 Hth ' rf ^ ,rd * oooftt^ta. ^ressmants. 


t bungalow. 

tt QFFICR HELP 

ADVERTISEMENTS^Sr 

THIS CLASSIFICATION 
MUST COMPLY WITH 
THE 

BRITISH COLUMBIA 
HUMAN RIGHTS ACT 


...__ ecctd- _ 

sicknaas plan the* Is availabla to 
you on a coat sharing basis. 3. 
Modern housing and accommo 
datl6os. 4 . Good educational, com 
merclai and recreational facilities 
1 5. Unparalleled summer and 
winter recreational opportunities 


include 


Position open for a Clark III 
VICTORIA CANCER CLINIC 
—.. — -eiT/ ‘ 


_fully Integrated forest 

products company employing more 
than 4500 people throughout B.C 
Mackentie currently has a popula¬ 
tion of 74)00 people and is located 
120 mile* north of Prince George 


LOST: TORTOISE SHELL AWU ! MATURE 


mpr# details, cbll 479-1 

BABYlftfll 


female cat. *hit# collar., ouirtd tor girl 2 vt 
--»o Marote. Gordon Head Min>t*r 3th. 

area, reward 477-3353._.soma light household 


1 3 moi 
My I* 
duties. 


(W«.„ ROYAL JUBILEE HOSPITAL | A recruiting team will be In Vido- 

APARTMtNT MANAGER co^WW»o ofS^K>r SecorMa«rv u secretary to the Director [emter tS'cwS’ucrfnti??;*®* S *p 

«MUM. Bev. mm ^ 3r“V - aas* 

requires a strong, mature coaote tu.idmg technology prooram car- >t *t as required, incum-! n tr c^filter 

»j^rwh«ct^!w <s» '•* ,,o “ - a —• - «-• w-isanct 

• n ' IK, rK&llAftae of a bUlldin 


For 

Rl- 


CLASSIFIED 
ADVERTISING 
COPY DEADLINES 


H A.\S0l'NCt.MtNTS 


>vwaiu. j borne ngnT nouswxj'u ou»i»», •<>- (h - ;h*iienoa of a bulldina mat rr> rt. 19 nr _____ 

-! LOBT; W PERSIAN CAT WITH ^“hLrt^'^day ^ttays n * <Kj ‘ ,,rm J tetiurSi M m,i * M.SlSiui tt^ng ^oaed ef 43 

rx tabbv and white marklnos, Walsh TJS'lL* °* Vl " v nanca — jNm»)ng^>anaral CteNy Ptm * ...» _ w.o.m.j shorthand 1» worn. 


i 303-3411 - Local 272. 


5 B.C. FIELD BATTER 
Corps has vecancas tor . 
girls 13 to 14. Room 203 _ 
Armoury Wednesday evenl 

O.m. 

PARADI ’ DRUM CORPS 
LateDwa Rpri 


tabby and white markings, welsh 'n.tivn 

__ Road arsa. if found or saen please 991 

Y CAOET Pnona 452-47N. GIRL FRII 

TuTchutTv ! T « ■M'* 1 in *aa*<'* r « 

I VICINTIY rMt.trurtiae related 


and garden! 

pay a high 

icq duties ttuMd rtghlj- 


are prepared to 


evs ano , rvkic tint iki winuriv ' 'O #»'»• m r»3t'« ww ' ~ — - • j- 

Bay St. m Juf Conatryction related business. Thla BUILDING 

nines i P 01 ® V/,trt * Caoaoie also bf 

_cSarsd * Ro * d ' ^ mg’ sa tarr oTsTiO per monte. rt aft MbR 

3TU- 


Mr R. $. Me Ewan 

ci rTyV^^SoN 


salary Plus bonuses to 

(Pte. Loncord: m spt. . - irfMalrTstr-t - 

MANAGER , Pentidon^B.C.^lSk 5A9 

suptrvialWE lent-,-- — 


w.p.m.; shorthand 120 w.p.m. 

1 Kncwledge of medical and sdentif. 
ic terminology; dicatphone ability. 

salary- 3934 03-1004JO. 


» reward offered 

Centre JOld Butova Acutron 
C#mrr ;c 


LOST 
watch, 
around 12.30 In town. 


Please ramy gtetTng' particular* fo Vn^ali^phaste {d'^anfiortei I ADM INISTR AT IV E 

Victoria Press. Boa 1. .tervkas and txterlancfd r^PPinPP 

r «•*? 


CLASSIFIED 

SERVICE 

FOR 

DUNCAN 

COWICHAN 

VALLEY 


! 11* Coins and Btampe 
AUTOMOTIVE 

1153 Automobile Financing ang 
insurance 

, 144 Auto Body and Palntina 
)42 Agt 0 Raoairs. Service and 
Towing 

iao Campers, Trailers end 
Motor Homes 

>44 Cars and 1 rucks Wantad 
iso C*r* tor Sale 
i )3l Sports, Import Cars 
1140 Lease Vehicles 
149 Mobil# Homos and Parks 


v ALLL I 169 Mobile Homes and 

AND CHEMAINUS!jjj SK. c S k ?H& v 

Classified Ads phoned in_to^eur {5 Trucks. Buses and vane 
Duncan office before 3.30 o.m 1J4 u-Driva and Auto Weaning 
win appear in the foltewln* dav s 

papers. ACCOMMODATION 

7AA.A) 81 *115 Convalescent and Rest Hem#* 

✓ *40 OlOl V5 hof#l4 

— .— - J — 1 173 Summer Homes. Cottages 

TRRMS OP PUBLICATION and Resorts 

F.p Publications (Western) Lim- W tourist Accommodation 
lt#d ihill not bo Dibit to? non* icijtai 

'^d^na^amten^^d^^S.W Apartment* to Rate. Purnlshao 
grlv 1 lament 200 ApifTir.tnts to ROOT, 

in th* event of error eccuringi Unfurtnuhed 
th# liability of F.P. Publications »2 Furniture tc'Rent 

Skh 01 " ” K i“sr^.i!Kr*JSS 

« >• "> AZS SRmJiSt ,«. «.n- 

non snail ba made '*'! th '"twurs m HouJ#K#t p if ^ Rooms wanted 
tnaraafter and if not mate sh^H 2 il Houses te Rant. Furnished 
2®’ ^ c ^4 W thii'^e Irv I 10 Houses to Rant, unfurmshad 

be qttowqa ^ nwq ttean onq ^, 212 Houses Wanted te Rant 
correct insertion not for errors not )W Room * nd gbprg 
at<ectmg th* value of advartisa- ^ Room #nd Wanted 

Km n» mrm aeoro* 1,3 »!> R* r ’ 

All **tim#tte of cost ar# appm* 1>4 Rooms wanted 

i^th # ipica acWly ula? ^l 204 Sh-r#d Accommodation* 

. y-2T*212 Sv» t! V^tSft 1 PtRRIKIRL 
Prasad f who reslrv# ^h# right 135 Automob.lt Flngnclng and 
in it* soit discretion to clateltv* 
r« t ect or insert copy furnished 
Ait advertisement* must comply 
with the British Columbia Homan 

SR 

rica reWgion. colour, marital 

OH 

has J! 6 *l , S!i h t nr0wBh ,n *. 253 country Homes and 

Human Rights BtanchV THX Exchange Real Estate 

White every Tff’ ^ 290 Farms V ba e and^ Wanted 

J°i^ ,r .'rtvlrt>iJ? as ^ 243 G,r *« 4 * ,0f *"•' R#nV 
•s m pos»ibJ*, we accept 2^ Gulf island Propgrtla* 

& 2S Houtes Wanted* te Buy 
ur# or delay In 295 Listing* Cancallad 

rapltes, however CMNad. wheiMf J4| LWIngt yvantao 

hr nagllgtnc# or ofttarwlH _. .271 Lots for Sale 

^•294 Mainland and Outwf-Province 
Properties 

,273 Property tor Sate 
274 Property Wanted 
"‘i R*venue Property 


i OOMIX; EVENTS 
a Mi MEETINGS 

BASEBALL 

BINGO 

TUESDAY 

Victoria Curling 
Club 

1952 Quadra St. 
Early Bird 7 p.m. 


LOST: AUG 
Point arte, our i 


21 ST OGDEN 
Hi adutt female 


OFFICER 

To provide financial and accobunt 
--*o P9 ‘ 


D«r#cter of Personnel 
Royal Jubtteo Hospital, 


care for my 4 school-age chlldrenn. ^ farther exw 

_..... „„ HP 2:30 to 5:33 p.m. dally. Mon. to busInMS Thlsl 

cat ' Snookv ail black with a faw Friday starting Sateamb^ 5th in 4nd re ' sp< , ns .ti« wsltlon. Reoty tb 

w'-ite hairs yellow #v*s. 333-4538. mv torn*. Mart.ndai* ara^Can- victoria Press Box M2 

>0. m US „ I 

Read rft i3-4343 l atiar^JO^woaT'twr* sobar^marrted c^etakar 3^ Isas. ci*i transactions tnd man*Ggjte" 

««w . . -L’v fas TfSS. r.S’C'S.lt.rKi SilSf ssLssrw; 

fauHO«T nmWm uu f.’S?’!?* poop ta^m ore Mod ^kn^edge^Ho^ bookkaapteo. raoutattons and procaduraa may i ef#nc**wi2T toe ai'an te 

T#fri ' important. Written references re- Excellent tv o bedroom suite avail also be required —- 


DIRECTOR 
OF CARE 
SERVICES 


t^VhtMrerwT ^« n *hd capati#, m 0 services to Provtnctel Post- ^ 

iWv fo * fritter expanding aa tablls h#d secondary Council*: Atadamk. . V* U» 

«#.’ In !L-1K^ ,, U!!S! W 2 ^cuM^n*' Trbih- WELL-ESTAGLISHED VICTORIA required ter James fc 

\i Ictenc* and Univarslttes. contractor require* a fuli-tim* 214 oad personal and 

cookxeeoer - accountant to take care faciity Apply m 


- CARETAKER RE- 


Tillpuf^: win tncted e raMona^uty temVi 1 : 

tSSSSis B«nun» 


Bav Lodge a 
- intermadiata 

on with 
St., o* 


ha#It c«rr4 52T544gT " | ___ ... 

LOST *ONTARiO-AAONTREa"l |T. 1 habte- Vlgtor 'te Press Box'li. 

FART ” TiVB’.^; through Friday. 

>afT chlV MOVIEMAKERS WANTED, FAIR 

_ _ country 

and Chamberlain. 5«S-3B*7. ’ satting. 452-3274 between 5 and I 


S • v a r a i vea-s 


owred on interview. Satery'heg©- agii' Tdeai for retired pemoruFor 

.. |4, personal intervlaw te j aahana Quailfkanana- - -. - - 

field Homemakers Service needs and'^metetelh C ' S * 

mature person* mth good house- with a variety o» inciv»oue«s eno handwriting stating 

qualification* to Victoria "Press 

Begoi*-Sh*F FXPPBlehLtD WArum.lnli Full nr oart time 44 D*r hoor 111 MM *° x 4 


____ Nanny-llpnt housakc-. 

LOST GREY MALE KITTEN *«nMv wfth 3 

ndn^wh'te u*»* around Oak Bay C *Si 4274 

FOUND ONF CALICO _ FEMALE ( --r” 

" tten 4-5 montns cld. Begoe-Shei- EXPERIENt.fcO.- -- r - . —. . - 

courra area. 59S-2333. ntQht^ auditor required ter major starting. 


HEAD NURSE 

Registered nurse required t 0 a& 
minister and suoervue a 7s-e*d 
extended car* ward. Reouu-as • 
cants having or tor exoerie’nca "in Ttlnlmum of 5 years nursmg axpe 

; “if i'Jsa.sr s. 

m*nf Qualified applicants aori/ 


r* parson, with good house- ^ith a variety of 
sing skills and willing to car* orgennelten*. 

I— «»* r,x and convalescent p#o org«nli*itens. 

M A T U R E , | ole. Full or part time. 34 par hour Minimum aaiary - 313.000 Per 
Tralnlno ava.latl*. inter^ annum Application* by September 
on* can apply at 1377 i 8 . .973 to Mr. D. W Couch. Exa. 


. Jissror. AsrnSi,"iJr , -' n ^ 

InyivUutl, ,M SSJ25WTBt -- mi - 


Personnel Dept 
Gorge Rd.. Hospita! 
43 Gora* Rd. Eas' 
Victoria. B.C VIA 1L7 


r, 


GAMES 


I . __ -■■■ : ■ I downtown hotel wages com- ested parsons can apply at 1277 n. ,973 to Mr. D. W Coi ch. Exa^- V' 

LEThBRIOGE GALT HOS- i rnaflsurate with experience, apply Fairfield Rd. September 4th and jtiv* Director, Academic Counc- 1 , . 

o.t*^ Nursing Pin Reward in parson to 245 Quatac St. Sect ?th mornings or phona 334 )740 so 7^24^1^ Square VktoT Accl.-I 
___14- s, betw een lfl a.m.-'x p.m._after 3 P.m. »n y day w* car* ter Ma, BC. viw iHf d^iart 


TfT.H. WALLET. 

- 477-lfW. 

-- - | Mot 


S50-S300 

5 Extra Ganges 

S600-S800 

But. Baseball for Yo 

BNGO 

RE-OPENS WITH A 

BANG 


I HtLP WANTED 
GENERAL 

advcr ri s smLntsL'T 
Tins, CLASSIFICATION 
MUST COMPLY WITH 
THE 

BRITISH COLUMBIA 
HUMAN RIGHTS ACT 


DISHWASMER-GrNERAL HELP 
nted for cafeteria, hours 3-12:30 
jAde*#rldty. AooUcattens in 
writino «my, YM-ywcA Catetaria 
^ 350 Courtn ey St., Vi ft 1C4. 


UNIVERSITY Of 
VICTORIA 

Madia l Technical 
Services requires 

TECHNICIAN IV 
ELECTRONICS 


Good pay and working con- r ' * nc .* d >> ** d * P0<V 


OAK BAY PARKS 
AND RECREATION 
CENTRE HOST 


Insurance 

233 Mortgage Loans and Insurance 

234 Mortgages tor Sate 

210 Personal Loans and Insurance 

233 Wanted to Barrow 

REAL BSTATR 


The Oak Bav Racraation Centra 

reuu.rti a mature and rgdponal-__ «, ... __ . 


ASSISTANT MANAGER 
GOLD S FABRICS 

-—I--- Full time position available fo- 

SEOOT VASTER NEEDEO FOR person with exper.enca in textiles 
Scout troup. If you have some i nd draper/ at the retail level 
,:->are tlm* to shore w* wotid P'ease phone Las’te Elliott at 
like to hear from vou. Central 595-22)3 ter interview 
S..^h •rw^Mw ulhUMMO^ LADIES" MAOT^MM 

IMMEDIATE OPPORTUNITY store has OP*' irg tor excerlancad - „ m m»c 

for ambitioua hardworking paoote. sales cterk. This position provides JV'« l^hifnhnrx^ VT 

full or part time, training sup- a f-day. *or* .veek with soma Sat _"nitenome. Y.I. 

■^u*d. Car naadad. From 33JB mi uroaya-off. - - - 

hg^r 315-4441. 'Box 11. 

B A B Y | fT T E R UROINTLY [EXPERIENCED CLEANING]aiactronlc . 

wanted in my horn# for two boys people reou.red light cteaagra,* technical assistance in-- , „ ^ - - 

ages 5 and 7. Hours, 7 a.m.-9 a.m. floormen and window daandr*. to varibu* deoortmants 54-.*0 wpm knowledge of _ 

and 3 p.m.-5 p.m. 39 g day. Call iWrlt* Giving details ot soacteltv faphon* and am*n switchboard 

333-934T with work experience history, vk- Qualifications include completion of, operation, salary commensurate 

tor la Pr*u Box 3$e. _*?•<*• 0“#i!tkaftens. . taohnkir in- | with txparlanc*. axceitent benefit* 


WHITEHORSE EXPERIENCED 

bookkeeijer for final! CHOCOLATE 
department store. Accounts DI PPE'RS 

:*avable, cash balancing. Fun and part-time work available 
bank rec Should be capable t»T- h * nd - po, !_ di .‘ > ®^* ‘'LY**'’* 


«»"v>'c;-~ v«> ggrgexajssrtjat a 

-turino new or modifying existing quirtd for Alcohol Counselling ell 

CLEANING) electronic equipment; aravMng , fc located In downtown cart. *“ 
light ciaaners, * technical assistance in electronic* c4rrt must have accurate 


ditjons. Phune Mr. Hoivood f^Z***;^ 

3t :a3-4778 OT alter Sept. 4th tor its various locations on Van 

at Maytair Hotel in Van-j jJT lf , Sq'SA?* ,r 
couver, or write to Box 4040, ‘ on an order desk count i 

lotstians and vou want an oooorti 
-- — outside aateapart 


. Jt 

. Apofl- 

>t tvp <Jrc* 


, 4, 1978 



NOTICE 
OF COPYRIGHT 


R3SS VZZU 


Pun com^ata and sel# coovr'flht J|s Up v lt(and profit. 


. Publications Western) Llm 

m.’hsssu: 

—S-'SS 

borders, •tenbfuraa of similar 
romponents which Is, or 
plied to Victoria Press 
advartlaar In the _ for 


EARLY BIRDS — 7:30 a.m 
REGULAR GAMES - 7:30 p.m. 
BRING A FRIEND 
MEET A FRIEND 

- g v E" y »OPV WELCOME 

The Royal Scottish 
Country Dance 
Society 

New Beginners Class** 

Open House Man s*pt. 11 
Sir Jamas Douglas School 
Fairfield and Maas Streets 


Isabel Buxcav 
Bobbie Hue brer 


MOTFJL DESK CLERK 

Includes '*ve in sui 

a with exparlt__ 

.—.. Castle Inn. 133 Gorge 

son must be friendly, outgoing and E**t. 
aue ® establish and maintain a J/AwrarT 
*orm and connenial atmosphere in T*ANTBD. 

tdlvldoai initiative 
—-r 1 -»"1 lodgement are re- . 

Quired due to the nature and vari -1 

A. V on- ' APPRENTICED HAIR DRESSER 

CMftJi <2T Item " mafnlenlntl' ___ PROMOTE YOURSELF. SIX FIG- 

tatks this parson®must ateo*anwre ' WANTED QUALIFIED BARBER *.» ind.iS^dem 

that Recreation Centre guests *Nli»t t° train ha rdrasst'. Apply ^usTrlJl: M Pk*pendent 

**** Doughs SI* ft phoo# ». 

- .TMi: 


cieandr*. to van 

W 

trade o->a Utica Sons, teohntcar kv , _.... -- - 

stltute or aquivatanf In exoertence; | offered Application* in writing to 
five or more veers related work Executive Director, Drug and AF 
- — 5T--->: canal RghabHttgtten Society, No. 


laMCkuamv training ttma; PttttBtt 
thaoratkat and practical 2C9^733. 

id^sofld^aflt* 


I .• - witwTGOt WAITER.WAITRB 34 . |tMteAtnd*. _ _! technology partl^prlv ’as’ lt’’a'^ I JXPaRIENCED RECEPTIONIST 

_ ^ - “ __maintenance and lanltortel vnr k. 

* DRESSER 1 Full-time employment with ex- 


Jehnaon St., V3W 1MB, 


fv to ba an outside saleso 
teteonone or write. Ian Orr nan'-/ 
■tectrk Ltd., 3971 - No a Road 
Richmond. B C V4V 1X3. or 
VB-Hll local 205. 


emptoyment 
comoanv. Fteas* writ* to| 


raaum* by Saptfmber 3th. lt7| to 
Mr. Wm. M. Johnson 
Program Director 
Oak Bav Parks and Recreation 


operators, *terf 
;v »or appointment 

>534. 911 a.m., 4-7 p.m 


fica. Th# following Qualifications 
are aaaantial: good typing, ptees 
y: 31.369 te 31.539 par month «nt and confidant aHItuda. neat 
a*v In ogrson to Pgrsonnal Se- ! •ppoaranc*. non smoker. Monthly 
as. L Building, University of se'ors based on peat working gx- 
ctoria, no later than Saptamoar ptrlanca end overall ability. 
1971 I Fteas* 4bPly In own handwriting 

I albtlng work experience and per- 
I son*! requirements to Victoria 


LICENSED AUTOMOTIVE ME 
chanic with shoo foreman expert 
ance, or ablllt/ for running th* 
bays in a large service **at c- 
Must be able to estimate, and deal 
with the public in a 'tourtaous a-a 
honest manner. Raolv in writ>rMj, 
statlnp ag*. experience and seiarv 
♦xpteted. te Victoria Pres# tax 14 

REGISTERED 

NURSES 

Position* avallaeia ter prtvat 

t&V%SXJf98>,i n *"' m 


RESIDENT 

ASSISTANT 

MANAGERS 


coup'* 


_ _ term of re 

auction proofs, vetexs. engrevi 

SWaLMXMA’#' 

belong te the advertiser. 


SUBbCRIPTION 
RATES 

- _ . Wherever carrier aMvic a is 

or are, *up- maintained. 54 00 per month 
— — — By mail — Vancouver island and 

.... *»:*» StTJMi SGrtT 

zsx ss 

(SOM fT '°° nu p4r * mon,h • 


BUSINESS 
OFFICE HOURS 

Monday to Friday 
8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. 


Moiling Address: 
Victoria Press 
P.O. Box 300 
Victoria, B.'C. 
V8W2N4 


PHONE 'V 
DIRECT 

386-2121 

TO 

PLACE 

YOUR 

CLASSIFIED 

ADVERTISEMENT 


-mg Caned*. 3UJ8 par 
month, 3220 per vaar 
BY MAIL 

Saturday Timas (teiv 
Sunday Colonist Only 
Canada. 60 cents par capv. 1*0 00 


E $iW?rv.. 


7444111 

Nanaimo 755-2744 

Lika Cewlchan _ 7 1^4204 

United States Rapresantatlvas 
LANDON ASSOCIATES INC. 
Naw York, ChJc*#c, Soufhfiald. 
Atlanta. Boaten. San Franclaco. 

iinnatI, Syrac uft,; H ambyfg. wil- 
Uamatown, Clinton, Memphis. 
Lavlttewn. 


maintain th# quideiines that hava •» V* Douglas 
been *#t down tor th* cldrens • *4-5421._ 

schadult involving ^gfk" IvpJria'&S p^af^rrad^ oo^-'OAYCARE HOME NEEDED IN 
avenlng and waekand work with i«a frrJw^iVtViw St Vic West area Out-ot-schoci car# 

HT S'TfyjfJrr r ist «J> Swffi ” ii, sliLX r» ..wm 

should t# •«oected for this part " --- , B m. SuoaWlied by government wi'h aoartment axoarleftce 

Jim* post ton Wages will be RELIABLE SITTER WANTfO aaveare ? start managers for- 

t4 kit* 4 - 50 * hour iJ for d4 *» and evening* for :• • • - - bjg-tirr * 

Ple*se submitapplkation *nd-or month and 2 moniri old qirls on BABYSITTER REQUIRED IMME- pool. t_ __ _ _ 

— -- — ■ ■*- - tasty casts My heme only, idiately, my horn*. 1 boy*. 3 and re-xaclnn m»n#n#r s 2 days 

314-1730. 15 months. Weekday afternoons, MCftk . Please state exBariqnca_ 

.^.TTkOo.;^nr oC D1 7,tisz!” ” ^ —— SS? »!"oI»2Ld v oKlLmSR 

Sir james^Oouglas 5 Schoo* a'reJ EXPERIENCED CARETAKER *t W 2—I- -- - 

332-4132. for newer 43 suit* apartmgnt . HEAD NURSE rtqgirad for I bad 

— ~ «.- u v.:aVu 1 bioack. Near downtown. No chit- Cjrnonarv-lntenslv* Care unit. wr-f _, v 

— I ®- A ®JlL A C E ^ ^ 2 !V^ D /0 T. HCW Idren or pats Pteaa* forward hill , Current R.NA.BC Rgiistratlon or. 
MICROFILM O-ERKS | ha^ ori-sch^Hr! dll Hr r *ww* *° Frees BoxJ74. ; *'jj»WJRvv Alimlnistratly# _ train- "«• 

(TEMPORARY POSITION) i »—«• my horn*. 39*433 4. _ REUABLE c BABYSJTTe^ re- ',r^. ' ' 


SECRETARY for 
office, would prefer _ 
•ace, but wiUlng to tral 


WANTEO: EXPERIENCED PER 
son to operate a crushing, screen¬ 
ing and washing plant oo#rancr 
i Lower Vancouver island area. All 

-'applications held >rt confidant r 

LAWYER'S i Plaasa raoty Victoria Press Box 


a. but wiUlng to train th* right 

r Gooo and shorthaod GRADUATE NURStS REOUIR O 

required Must have some L v ,.® c !? oe ^J o r ,h ' ,,s «» 8e ' 

IC* backqnpund S33G41000 de ** l,s ** R* f * N.A.D.C. contract 

.nt'managar* for i*rga modern 344 9071 H^iiH^Chfe.n VO 

’ rfiJu?^^i v ^?|L2Si|f"5|a CONVEYANCING SECRETARY Box 400 Victoria VIW 2P3. ' ^ 

r, * ur * d A mllnimum ot 4 veers 
^ experience rn a leoal office ess«n- *<>?fers with 
XZl tl11 Mu,t h,v * * ood typing and built uo roofing 
ente rtlctqcsteone skl'ls. Hours 9-5. Salary ceflon rtquired 


Victoria. B.C. 

VIR SE* 

4049 R.F 


. —Jhone 
51000-SI 700. 
ante 334-47S4 


operating 

Vancouver 


ara raqtlrad _. 
bia Assessment 
successful applicants will 
Ml 


Victoria Native 
Friendship Centre 

BINGO 

ESQUIMALT LEGION 
22 ADMIRAL* RD 
SUNDAY 

EARLY BIRDS I p.m 

Viv!/ L EXT!A^!&AVf _ .. _ __ 

Proceeds In aid of our many p#o months microfilm experience. A - 
Dia-orianted proarama. —" - “ 


e v^t.'^.V qulrad for September **n Mi 

asfc°tSS3T ^ D4/T,m< 

ten t Aa WtafHy,- The i Oce# n Air Systems, can 314-3090 - ‘ -- 


'&&£&£?& i; wX^S-THaarB i w. 

m coronary intensive ce e 'an^^asirabi#. Salary sifa Plua. ^ 


MID 


FBIFNRIY muMTFFT .if. DIRECTOR Of NURJIN6 

Fcnoof otrl to bo cotnoonton to n- GuTofnT'ltST'^ D '* 1 


. m 


*,»» to. 


tUrSotir ’*£?«& «»vnTtwiR »hq <5?i»i!5SroF nWHfjsJ dToofnt’ Rioof 

and th# maintananc# of beak m»- ' n##d#d for Baavar Colony In sgutn o#k Bay. J9| 24 J* V Soi^fSt 

croflim equipment Applicants f*Tt r .*i Saanich area. Pleat* cfii —- T — --V9L ICS. 

shaubl Possess a High School DI 1 3B -_ _ DINING ROOM HELP _ FO* | WANTED- T 

^•^r, 0 ® £ “SSSI, MATlMf PER30fTNET0€D"tb X‘ 


1 SECRETARY REQUIRED FOR ‘Wanted experienced Logaam 

estates and wills. Must hav# tom*- 

eroertence in # lawyer's offlca. 

Fast accurate typing an absolute 


r.anc# and 


commercial 1 car# 

offlca axpe -1 mv noma, | _ 

minimum of Vassantlal. Oakland* area. 994 524* 


WANTED 
oaraon. take fyi 


dosing Date 


PAGE 

REPRODUCTIONS 

OR 

MICROFILM COPIES 
OF 

COMPLETE PAPERS 
AVAILABLE 
FOR ALL PAPERS 
PUBLISHED 
PHONE Stt-7tlL 
LOCAL 27S 


ATHLETIC 

BINGO 

WEDNESDAY 

Vic. Curling Club 
1952 Q UADRA 

A "NEW CHAPTER OF" SWEET 
Adelines hat been termed In the 
Langford-Cofwood area and wHl 
hold its ttrtt practice and meeting 
in thg C o'wood Community Hall on 
Tuesday. September 5th at 8 p.m. 

AM interested ladies eighteen and 
over era invited 1o attend. It la not 
necessary to hava any muak*t 

training or to hav# to ba able fo - 

read musk, th# pn*V requirements *hler-h**t- 
ar* a desire to ama and the ability 
♦o carry a tung. Far f u rther Inter, 
mation call in* Paul at *73.3477 or 
Carolyn_B#rtrand at 47H943 _ 

ST JOHN AMftULANCE 

STAHpARD • 

FIRST AID 

Clui 


moniri microfilm vxperif nc« m — —* — -- -L 

reasonable typing spaed Is ra REQUIRE AFTER SCHOOL BA- taSnaaert 
qulrad bysWriB tor girl in or ad# 2. At STSf 1 : 


Monthly salary. 3943.36 
Compgttttan tea.: 7343 
i: sept am I 


KSffljf 7W' r '$iWVuS! 

after S p.m. BABYSITTER N 


In rKaivifto home. VIS 


bar 12, 1973 



day through Friday at *t. John 

Itrjxux 

MY3TERY TOURS 
Laav**^ V,l. Coach Line* depot 
avaTY Sunday at T:» p.m Ratgrn 
S a.m. 14.38 include# too. 335-4411 


Application forms may be obtained 
from the various assessment of- 
iices located throughout thg prov 
Inca Plaasa direct completed ap¬ 
plication forms to 
Director of Personnel 
B.C. Assessment A#k"- 
' £27 HIIIsfdc^Avenu* 

WANTED^^lOTERIENCED 

MATURE R-SIDENCE MANAG 
ER 

For new a* suite apartment com¬ 
plex, Cloverdal* — Quadra era*, 
excellent salary, piaase sand ra- 
su ma te Victoria PraaTBox 2S. _ 

EXPERIENCED PART TIME CA- 
" *" 'tea*. Also axpari- 

_..'#**-wafters. Piaase 
imas. to Mrs. Brown, at 

-oo Clock. Town 

Country Shopping Centre, or eve¬ 
ning*. to Manager, after » p.m. 


MATURE 

I* needs^ ... __ ___ __ 

•c^vw f*™ ■•ZSFSoS. 
-- . Mril It 

BABYSITTER needed your » 
cneo nom « Stoh4» area. Starting ‘ 
fc Can tember tor 21 month old 

'-• n Figae* phon# 434-4268, 4H*r 4 pm. | 


TRULY I^TERESTED | TYPIST 

fv<ll Chare* •« (tolteht- Intt-estlng position ... 

"‘LSa 1 -.downtown accountant firm, general 
** =r 3tfrt3 | H *fl9s. corrasoondgnea. 

n 

t referancas rg- 

ria Pro as, Box 


*£T'«f O OLMJ COU« Mi "VS*” 

letYts^^qraon^ axaart Ot' i* ** Street, 3SS7B1L ! 


■ ™ LEGAL 95 

Top dollars offered lor toe 
experienced conveyancing 
Ar cuav laqai firm. 


pnon# 477-3313. 


t4 


8A1.I S PERSONS 
and AGENTS 


BATON 

from Si 

474-1334. w *r m rzr , w ” w ' I on Outf Islands. Paraon #*, _ , 

ijw»Tl»iMaLr?Swif-l*nrfgg«L»A££.*flgMKSlPaBF^Mg WITH 


<!IUr a TMSS ^ XU ! 

iSHA'°Z L AA,L>V T .L'.; mBYartoffira BA' 

saK** 

r° M ' 


ancad 

aaaiy^a^lnn 


REQUIRE 
r meed caoi 


_ RESFDN5IBCE EXPE 
■tt... capable young parson tot 
dally after school and torn# eve¬ 
ning car* of 6 year ow boy, ~ 
Mgrt^wnt, references - 


COWICHAN SECURITY AND 
Investigation* LtiL raquir#* an ax- 
aartanqgd bgroter alarm m#t#i i#r 
and a salesperson with a security 


URGENT NEED OLDER LADY 

kRMsar zpm 

jioffr#j|^aftor 3. Baalda Esquimau 


WANT ED : 


_ 


Fairfield; 

— full"ar i 


l —...—^ 

according te qualifies- veyanclne and 
further Informatton call start. 244-4754. 


_ ... o. m. 333-1 913._ 

-E X PE RIE N'fO 'MODELS 
'• | Fine Arts Program. Will a 

si McwixK - Ptfa g r-fiooM wsa&»s« , ic:8£ v iirK ,, fiss 

and board in exchange for light ♦•ined soRe olus wag#*. s*a front, Lansdawn* Road, - 

3301 attar 5 53t->02f _ y • * , vl> jif. and s«fid phate a i 

tai'5 of pravlou* aumertenca. 


!«: 


emale aeoilcants of all 
hys.oai staturaa. m#aa* 
^Cemoaor Coj- 

and board in axchanabtor light 'tainedtaRa plus we***. Sea front, Lens dawns' Read, 

ha uaakaaplng. 4JM33S after J. 55t-332|. ___ ^ \js p j j? and und phatea and da- 

A6ATURe S X P E Rl E N C E D WANT SALESMAN FOR Ol ReCT i IS*!. 0 *. • w>#r ‘r*l_ 

waUer-waltr#*#. A poly in parson commerc-sl sccounta. swarience WANTED: ENERGETIC INDI- 
onjv_ between 12 nodn-l p.m. *33 . fc* *J LJ^ r * 3 ■ commission oasis vldual te^trsin #s rsceotfonist for 

DESIGN 


... . ..VBOICAL SECRETARY 
FOR Qualified medical secretary ra- 
quired ter specialist * office. Send 


EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY I sons) 
ter pqrsenatl*. snqrgqtk career! H 


oriented MdCttfifli 


Phone calls 


irthodontlat’*ffka. T, tNr toilowina t«F*RIiNC10 
Nlf leaf tom. oood tvo.no oiaas- i tbry required h 


WANTfO: PART-TIME 

r 1 i5rteSS~ l,fSi 

babysit! 
ar and Ad 

RE PER i 

*her Oak- 

EXPEDICNCIO lieu 

Rr,B.d'Cv%tss 

BABYSITTER NEEDED POR 1 
yr. aid bey, 5 days a Weak. Qua- 
dre-ttiTisUe area. 383-4443 dav*. 

PART-TI6 

SS&.1 

AE iABYllTTRR* RE- 
id~ Naurs, vaaatarian or 

MACDONALD'S 

Full ttma hgib wantad. Piaase 
apply in garaen, 3446 Saanich Rd. 


_ . !D LEGAL SECRF- 

___ _ _ . ja*-i»3nr raquirad tor litigation. O&d 

hair VtvlUt ex I ,nT confident attitude neat «*• t JP** Gktaahon# aasantteT 

. - - , . . Picas* apply in own handwriting 

CLEAN-UP WORK . ‘ 


^Manaaar' 0 Mc^Snai cPrhE i‘V ^tro matijte‘inowdual 

-- ED per. rt'* and a£cational aid* inqui- 

In dnilca- rfas '“or'einatlan store-ham* anvi- 

1 ,Wi, ,r'rf nn 




WANTeO EX»ERIF.NCED per 

ton for coui.iar :ervlca ‘ 

tassen and coHe# shoo 

Praf. Bo x ?6, 

F? -. I WANTED CHIMNEY • U fO 
R RE- h^^ at Nprth Pan 


MATURE CXRCRIBNCED LADY 
aver II, tar reef horn* 363-3717. 


island. 


o.m.__ 

REOUIR^ PERSON TO ANf 


ISWER 

Salary 


SEMI RETIRED FINISHING 
carpenter, electrician, plumber, WANTED: APTER SCHOOL DAY- 
tor lab estim ate. RI-4C43. 933-4032 . 1 car*. ? children. Margaret janklns 

i E;rT w 


I BABYSITTER NEEDED. 

I work in my home, 333-3474. 


SHIFT' 


ouirt.. 
lawyer' 
with co_ 
to start. 


SECRETARY RE- 


7 > years sxperlaoca In a 
SatofTi® 


9SK <85fWmiK 

year s #M*Bi|iBH 

1441 VIWi 
confidence. 


ffB.'frJCJtJa 


DENTAL HYGENtST WANTED S 

* tdev* a week,, humenistlc den- 


ag*k.g<aegar.< 


ir%mrs 


CKH 

CONTACT MR. REG MIDG 
MkL*€«, T Wf^REAT OUR 

m wE o N u/ H ? U i)S V W ,»f 

NO PRESSURE, EVERY 
BOOY LIKES it BETTER 
THAT WAY. REG MIOGLEY 

X \. ‘ ' 


EXPERIENCE 
or shingle »ppi> 
for contractor 


years axpari- ’ EXPERIENCED CEMENT FIN- 
convey a nc> no 1 tHer tor local work. Transpo'- 
rr"7rV>'I* I ta(on victoria Press Box 


ADV£KTISLMENTS IN 
THIS CLASSIFICATION 
MUST COMPLY WITH 
THE 

BRITISH COLUMBIA 
HUMAN RIGHTS ACr 

OAK BAY 

- Maraatt* and Gower Oak Bay Pro- 
for con- j PjMlas^Ltd^ra^uir#*^ two licensed 


i persona This is s small c 
., with conganlal people, ampi* 
parking and a Pleasant at mo 
sphere, if you art the Wpe of per 
son that enioys earning a itv i 
under these circumstances oiaa-,* 
€*ll ALEX GOWER or PETFR 
“ >ROETTS^at 998-2437 tor a par 

*MArSeTT$ AND GOWER 
OAK BAY PROPERTIES LTQ 
2tt7 Qgk jay A vgnue 

AUTOMOBILE SALES! "* 


DISTRIBUTORS LOOKING 


dam. or commission All 


you n 
lilt*. C 


ELECTROLUX NEEDS MEN 
and woman tor taka and aeryTea 
work. Earning opoortunHle* uqllm, 
lt#d Commission and bonus**, ca* 
aaaantial. phon* 4784944 between 
3:33 and 10 p.m. tor appointment 


Classified - Victoria's Largest Proven Market Place-Where Your Articles Se II Fastest! Cost Less to Sell ~3 86-2121 

, - - ■■■ .. . . . ■■■■■■■— ... ■■ ■ ■ ■^ ■ ■ * 1 i ' ' - . — ■■■■■ ■■ t ■ 


~wJ 






























































































































































































* 


BALER PERSON* 

ud AGENT* 


BBTV 

Bloc* Bro*. 

Real Estate 
Career 
Training 
Produces 
Success 


N SITUATION* WANTED 

FtkMUV MM W1SFte$>0~M0VE 
- • mwCmm 9m Nirttt Cast of 


l Bl’SIVEM* RKRV1CEA 
and DIRECTORY 

Carpet* and Uuoteum 


BUSINUS* 9ERYK7E9 
and DIRECTORY 
Kxcavattag 


Rl'SINE** SERVICES 
and DIRECTORY 


TRAVEL 


MATURE CHRISTIAN LADY 
went* to care for small cv'd 2 or 
3 days a weak, in my home. 
Esquimau area. 3*64601 

1 WILL BABYSIT CMILDSEN 2 
♦years old and up in my home 
esqinmatt area 3*6-9*69 




I BABYSITTING WANTED LON 
oecre Drive. Gordon Head area 
Mature, reliable. 477-9 764. _ 

PAINTING AN6~^6DO~~jb8Sj 
reasonable, free estimates. 
S ffrfSH. 

EXP Eft II E N C E (5 P A I N T E h 
needs work, interior and Exterk* 
°nooa afte r A p.m. . S92-0393 

STARTING septemer 

, .L r r*.«« d * vc *’ # ' ,ft mv 

; 595-5770. 


PULL 


HOME CENTRE 

issi Hiiisida m-ms 

Competitive Pricing 

On All 

Carpets. Lino. Floor Tlla 
For Residential and Commerc.ai 
— Professional Installation 
"toy •otter at Beaver" 


MUTUAL 

eouipweni rentals ltd. 

386-6155 


'IF' 


05 


3«5-« in 

4 BROTHERS - ALL AREAS 
FRFE ESTIMATES - ANYTIME 
Levelitne. backfilling, lawn pro- 
oarattons. tilling. Bobcat SC: vice. 

~ OILS MORTON EXCAVATING ^ B °° k 

Quality work - ' “ 

backhoe 


GOING ON A HOLIDAY 

Meviug and Storage I TOMAUIT 

- Luxurious I and 7 bedroom units. 

fully furnished on beautiful s*ndv 
beaches. Oft-season rates available 
.. r%_..AA r>ow April 15-Dec. 15 7*. 

akvaa & psms', skis , wan t 1 t ° r ® jt 

ftJBBTp3S nssx. 


I? « EDUCATION 

THE RCMAISSANCE SCHOOL 

BACK TO THE BASICS’ 

Small group instruction 
330 NIAGARA 


8% HI ILDINtt S| 1*1*1 JEs ?• 


DRUM CARTAGE 


IDGAR pnd MINK* 
•M NILLSID* 


' ' w, r JiS252' rates • m f v# M 8 n,h *w«"t«ntnts ^ a o nQ P° 1 ' Beo c h 

avaflabl*. Wardrobes and Mnui 

T3fc 4 m V,#W *'!boxes supoI led at cosL 3*3-9*61 j, fYiaUI 

i drains «/9-8480 - - - — I-bed room cone 

LAND CLEARING. BULDOZING, pd£ T J*cSflnKi 1 !8lf flljTttLJ 

tas , ’sr m a-£si»i"aea*.*- - !^’«- 

ti metes. 


OLINDA NURSERY SCH. 

Where Learnlnq is Child's Play 
A Child oriented program lor 3s 
and 4s. 53* 51. Char las St. 50-5*21 


VAN ISLE 
WINDOWS 

,401 DAVID ST 
383-7128 


ART CLASSES 
jnd general drawing and 

painting, day or evening, children* 
classes, regisler now for Sect The 

. Studio - 59*-135*. _ ^ 

POTTERS WHEEL CLASSES. 

(v*rtr(v.m , ondnminiums on oaau- start September, MS at island 
bedroom condominiums on oeau H4ndcraft Hoot# st5»11]. 


MCCREEDY BACKHOE - BULL- --- 
doling. Septic fields, hauling. Good 1 3*2-15*5, 
rales 479-30*5. _ T*¥aTb LAY AND 


[ “IGHT INFLATION. PAINTING 
interior, exterior. Pensioners low 
I rates. Written guarantee. 3*4-0827 

CARPENTER, ADDITIONS. REN- 
ovaNons. decks, fences, *7.00 hour I 
Block Bros, will train you in sound 3&3*M*4. 479-4005 
proven methods enabling you to 
ouicklv raach your desired level of 


ROBERTSONS EXCAVATING - 
450 Case, land clearing, bufidoiing 
and backhoe. ,595-8530. 


..1 VOW i- 

success in prastige gelling. A few 

MM&iia*|Aglifw 'oc«- 


I JUAN DE FUCA (BOBCAT) SER- 
! vices. Landscaping, backfilling, 
etc. 3**rS4*4. pag er 623._ 

LAND CLEARING", TIMBER 
| purchased bulldozing brush plied. 
Payment guarantee. 3*3-3065 


Skills ' technique 

House" yUSlQT. .._ __ 

gram. Successful, prestigious sales 
people aren't born, they are creat,[«_ 
ad through planned training. Cain®- 
today. Interviews by appointment - - 
only. 


E e R OX’’ I PAINTER, CLEAN TRADESMAN. 
Selling ierri-retired, aoulpoad. 477-2355 

the NEW "In-1 DAY CARE MY HOME. 
' Training pro- prater above 2 years. 3*5-9425 


TR SDK SCHOOLS 


Sprott-Shaw 


Carpets and 
Custom Draperies 

'A PROFESSIONAL APPROACH 
WITH GUARANTEED SERVICE 

HOURIGAN’S 

CARPETS AND LINOS LTD, 

FLOOR COVERING SPECIALIST? I 
715 PANOORA AVP. _ 3*6-2401; 

GORDON OLDNALL CARPET 
and Lino. We will netp you find 
■ the right carpet! Free estimates 
179-6509, 479-1*7 7. 

! CARPETS ANO LINO |N* EUROPEAN CRAFTSMAN. ALL 
1 s t a 11 a d ; reason**# ratas; ‘vees of fWKing end repairs 
fresjMflmates Phone 3*4-1656. | Ou*f#1»f**d work 721-3759. Gordon 

Carpet Cleaning 


ay or night. CSfPjrmsdJ 47^7117 bglbre 5 p.m. or 312-1642 1 INSTRUCTION FOR SPEECH 
reasonable raf*L Oapan- after J p.m. and weekends, ask for and drama. For information please 
>d courteous Free es- Percy or leav e maasag e._lean Gloria Street, et 3*48797 _j 

3*48075 pager 111*. VTo E NEEDED .. MONDAY- BEGINNER'S NEEDLECRAFT 
— Fndey trom Seanlchton. Brent instruction. Starting Saotamoer 

■ -- - - I —J QUILL AN wood area lo Town and Country seem? 

Moving and Deliveries. Very rea- tor 7 45 a.m. Will share qas, etc. 
sonebte rate*. Special rate for oen- John. 3*5-2176. 
stoners, 7 days a week. Phone — - - 

474 ' mi ■* .JomVnlum^w ?Mt R fw > SeptemS!r,' s,NCLAIR ACAOEMY Of DANC 

—and^ N^rnSr. Ix^fi^f log, W64 Richmond Ave. (near | NEW 


DAILY COLONIST. Victor I*. B C . Saturday September 1 197* 2,^ 

MUMCAI. 
INSTRUMENT* 

P.N.E. Discount 
Prices In Victoria 

galanti organs 

We offer vou a 7-vaar warrant v 
Tamily lessons, music course and 
delivery Ask about our PNE 
discount prices. 

CASCADE 
PIANO & ORGAN 
In Hillside Moll 

595-4124 


w 


You Can Atlord Us!! 
You Can’t Alford Not 
To Find Out About Us 
GIVE US A TRY 


\HORSECRAFT 

HARDWOOD 

IntfuetrldB Lid. 

38342)3 j 


45 


DANCING 


NOW IN STOCK 
ZEBRA WOOD—VERMILLION 
BUBINGA—MACA WOOO 
541 David St. 


MOVES 


THr D DELIVERIES.'October and Number.- 

mall. Eugene's, 3*3-352*. | view. Pool and blech. 478-S007 


Fencing 

ISLAND CHAIN LINK 
fencing in wire or wood 
Small ioba a apacialltv 
47743352 


- _:--—_ POlPU 

gig Movers teriront _ 

Furniture and cartage, expert* waaon September 
— ■ 3*5-6221 able. 471-9*45. 


: Head. 


ALL TYPES OF FENCING BUILT 
repaired. Free aatlmates 

~1«2/32. 


Colwood: 47I-SWI — *. Ktnhtw 

Don McCa*um Bruce Coop CoIICQ® of* BuSinCSS pack to SCHOOL special * no r v**v' n 

fhai bourne: 477-1*41 Thera i» no unemployment orob- • 47 *- 1050 ' **• 

Bub Cullwm Bruce Cop* lam for people with good office an<Tv™r hwd*^^? 11 ~ __ 

^ ^^^hTuTcft 1 they Furnliure Rcfinlahlng 

BLOCK BROS. ‘StHbST-%ro»T^ Sp#c# is $&«>”"• «•**- _ L *» 

10 12 Do ug lee Street, 3 84-8121. JV nnl 


REALTY LTD. 


33 


RANDS. MUSICIANS 
ORCHESTRA* 


FURNITURE. TV, APPL. j__ 

SALES PERSON i SPICE — the versetHe dance 
• bend. Repertoires for every oener 
d atlon. trom WWI to NOW *2M per 
n ight. Heer us: call 3M -457 9 

MUSIC FOR BANQUETS, WE6- 
dings, parties 3*6-9065 


n Manic do It Wim WILFRED GENEST. REPAIR 

1e kn« C PS vo»? l love ft fo?:• n ® Tefinlsh all types of furniture 
....... Te^ouah ^ m dL^aSl 33 vgprs of experience. 595-1054. 

den City Cerpef Care. 3*5-3913. 1 


| STORAGE LOCKERS *10 
month end up. Phone 3*8-5714 

I'Hlatar^Mit Dwirxmrs 

ISLAND 

DECORATORS 

Paihters, Paper Hangers 
Spray Painters 
Plaster Repairs 
Gyproc Filling 
383-9069 


GUITAR SAL1 !! 

G'BSON Les Paul Deluxe list 
$935) *J7‘ 

FENDER Telei.asfer d.sf *,’80) 

*410 

3*3-4255 FENDER Mustang w case ' 

t *590) '3IS 

'2964 Richmond Ave. (near NEW THERMOPANE. DARK IBANEZ "ICEMAN ’ 300 w case 

sde snoppino centre) opening framed. Saile due t 0 aborted con- (hsf |7X)> t*6S 

—- t -^ - ,..^tember »h. Qualified teachers, struction plans. Some units wire IBANEZ Las Paul Custom w 

KAUAI. LARGE WA- Pre-school to adults. RA.D, ballet, best on market; Westcraft wekted case (list *735) 

condominium. Station Al Gilbert jazz and tap. Exams., Cap TB. purchaser arranges deli- YAMAKI Jazz bass w. case (list 

15-35. Reason- competition. Recitals. For Imorme- very. (2 units) ICxj', xoo $150 

tion and regist ration , tall 593-4653. each; (3) 7'x3', XOO. *90 each: (?) ' 

COUPLES REQUIREtr-TO DANCER'S SUPPLY AND WOOL, o*ua. O^wn’^JIW^each! Mho 

."*•! door, *', LOX, *190 Clear, wln- 


_1 TWO__ . 

PER fill bus for 8 day R«no tr|p leaving j Shoo. 


PRVMHHPMRiPMHP__ ha* moved around 

Saturday September 9. For infor- 1 corne r , to 1005 Blanshard St. kitty 
matlon please phone 471-6179 | corner from the Royal Tk 

WAIKIKI -$369 ' I -■■ ■ - -- 

14 Nights - Air and Hotel _ DISCO—ENERGY! 

Western Canada Travel 3 * 3-6160 The latest dances, easy to learn. 

-- :- Atso; Jive. Jazz, Ballet, AAodern. 

MALE REQUIRES LIFT TO etc. No contract. Dancenergv. 

Montreal after Sept. 1. Share 1323A Govern ment . 3*4-3 14 1. 

3#5 ' a437 ‘ ROYAL OAK DANCE STUDIO 

- — ages. regir~ - 


case <1 

AMAK _ _ 

*4*5) $265 

GUILD F-20 (accousfic) (list $395) 
GRANT Classical (list $99,501 S 55 


I dews: (1) 5'x6'. $90; (I) 5 x5'. *60 
! each; Cl) triangular, $90 -'705 WII- 
‘ Ham Head Rd. Sunday only. 


SOFT SOUNDS MUSIT 

2031 OAK BAY AVE 
11.30-5 30 Mon.-Set. 59*-1524 


PERSONALS 


Tap for all ages, register before 
September 5. Phone Janice Toobv, 
_; 3*4-6725 after 4 p.m. 

tarhilr T o l SJ V eah?°tnirties ^SDl"'' CORDOVA BAY DANCE SCHOOL 
Eves. 58i.n03 fZZ'V .’JL I»^!«: Wr'Jjf -■« 


Large local store seek* a 

•need sales parson. Pteaae - 

resume and recant photo to Vic¬ 
toria Prase Box HI. 


GIVE YOURSELF A RAISE, CAS- 
tie Properties requires one or two 
active, licenced realtors. We offer 
full slate of benefits. Including top 
commission split. FRcDOY 
STARKE, 3*6-4164 or 479-3*66. 


FALL INTO SAVINGSI 
Wa will shampoo your living room, i 
dining room and hallway carpeting 
for only $42.95. This Is not stt*m 
cleaning. Satisfaction guaranteed. 
Phone Devi Enterprises, 479-6372 


Ktouring and Aamlim* 


CARPET ANO UPHOLSTERY 
cleaning and carpet repairs, free 
estimates. 595-412$. ■ s 


M & M FLOOR 

COMPLETE PLOOR CENTRE 
Hardwood. Carpats and Linns 
532 William St., 3*44343 
I Nights; Al 3*6-307*-Mlka 65? 430* 


..„JO pattison 

PAINTING CONTRACTORS LTD. 

I Special zing In sand Masting, 
spray painting, wall coverings and 
special coatings. 

"Wa Cover The island' 
Victoria 3*4-*831 3*4-0443 

Nanaimo 754-9321 

Courtenay 3*6-3296 

HER* PAINTING 


■an 


TEACHERS 


ADVERTISEMENTS IN 
THIS CLASSIFICATION 
MIST COMPLY WITH 
THE 

BRITISH COLUMBIA 
HUMAN RIGHTS ACT 


PRE-RECORD!, ft 
MUSIC* 

WANT TO BE A DJ? 


( rment C ontm<’ton* 
FRANCIS BROS? 




Gardening 


_ DECORATING 

.Free appraisals, cast consultant. 
I All lyoas of painting. All tyoee of 


teen*- exercises. 


good friends but erouId like to,JACQUELINE'S SCHOOL OF 
meet e lady tor a meaninoful rela Dance now acceoting registrations, 
tlonship who would Oke fe travel i Ballet students prepared for RAD 
to Eurooe and the South Paoftc ekarn. Col wood area. 642-4450. 
next year. This lady would be m ^ 

her mid-twenties (about 5'2" fo DAK CREST PLAY SCHOOL, 3309 
S'6">. attractive, aantfHvt, tom.- Cedar Hill Rd., for.children 3 and 
warm and aware. She would " 5 fnofnlngs 


appreciate outdoor natural beauty 
Mould feel comfortable at a di< 
(ascorted), a at 
by candlelight. 

c Ik *— - 


l»ng ( loop walks. 


symphony, or dinfng 
- I like logging, cy- 
Mks, "old world cut- 


week. 595-1*22. 


TEACHER DISCO BALLE.T 



2x4 kiln 9rled Spruce studs, mi 
run, $120 per M or 65 ewita each^ 

SAANICH LUMBER YARDS* 
13x-30' Garage 


Roofing extra 
I'xlO’ Greenhouse 


6'x7'J" Garden sned 
Work Bench Maieruis 
Pram Dinghv Kit 
5 x6' Compost box 

—SABOT KIT 7'11 
3041 Douglas St. 


$3*0 00 
*270 00 
*710.00 

* 14.00 

* 57.00 
t 11.50 


Music Gallery 

JK-M34 Q871 1400 DougU, 

Trade up to a Baldwin piano 
or oivan. Ask f »r 
BARBARA CRAWFORD 


3*5419* 

ERS — ALL AREAS 

- \ -^WyTIMI 


repairs. CemmarclaL »arm, rasi- tw-e' 1 and travel. She would proto BATON TWIRLING LESSONS. 
Partial. Lowest rates. Terms, abiv be Aires. Aquarius, Libra or 3220 Cedar him Road Resident. 


work guaranteed. 3*34112 


. _ 1 free ESTIMATES — ANYTIME W. E. FERRIDAY PAINTING, IN- 

Bascmcnt, relain-ng walls, side-1 Rototllllng, yard cleanups, power terior and exterior bv experienced 


Lao, _ 

thinking, 
not be oosi 
Isn" 


oriented and free 
eniov good humour and 
isasstvo. If a relationship 
tibia •— — alii ba 


phone 3*3 *247. 


can still be 


Ft EL 


RECONDITIONED 
Band instrument Specials 
Clarinets trom *9* 

xMwigggf* ;3S5S 

CRESTWOOD iltssst? 

These are iust a few examoies 
Drop in tor a>l your back to schoo 
-.g, nci musical needs. Special prices on 

Fre, estimates largest display of ^ 

kitten and vanity cabinets in V.c- Cn * ro *’ — 

toria, factory showroom, 141 Sklrv* 
ner St . Open Sat., 10-2 


_ CABINETS 


D. J 


Call walks, patio*, sat up and poured. 1 rackinq, aerating new lawn ore- tradesman, no lob too small; rea-, friends. Recant Photo please. 1 

DD AAAOTir*MQ soacialirln* ex^o'ad ' aggrev*l«-1 PfliV 00 ,*' * tc - service, sonable rate*. Days 3*4-1513, ava- don't like personals either, but 

rKvyfV\L/l ILfINj Journsvman wo'kmanshle guaraft-ljjAYf Lawns, fields, vacant lot nlngs 477-2*43 remember this is Victoria. Victoria 


also *3»4 ^ l *® u * ran " 1 for an ihis7 »ye 


PART-TIME TEACHER RE 
guirad tor Warehouse School an al¬ 
ternate program. 10 hours per 
v-eek. Mornings preferred. Teach¬ 
ing specialty In basic EBBfltaRd 

math to Grade IB level. - 

Barbara Pel man at 3I4-1B1X week¬ 
days. 


W I»AKT TIME or 
TEMPORA RY HE LP 

ADVERTISE3IEfrrS LN 

THIS CLASSIFICATION 
MUST COMPLY WITH 
THE 

BRITISH COLUMBIA 
HUMAN RIGHTS ACT 
experienced, part-tin 


ria area. Also 


3*5^S» 


Broughton St., or phone 


BANKoFB.C. 


day openings. All applicants si 
have previous banking and 
experience. To arrange an 


MANURE BABYSITTER 

ouirad for girl 2 vears 3 rr 
From Sept, 5th, 
i>oht household 
child welcome, 
hours par day. 4 
478400r 


vioutor. A few hours per day. 
interview phone Me Gordon 

terprises: 593-1705. 


plication# please. Mrs. M. Chan, 


vaar old. before school, part 


nSPINKY'S • 

Spinky's Mobile Disco Ltd. The' 

. professional poepie with you in 
mind. 656-1692 

r PAN MUSICAN LTD. . 

• we've got the Personal Touch, /. 
j 477-620C. j 'J 

MUSIC MAN 

479-8043 of 477-3752. 

DENNY'S CANNED MUSIC CO. 
Established 1964, 656-3585 

■VARIETY MUSIC FOR ANY OC \ 
. 1 csslon sod every tests. 474-1433. ! - 

WAYNE^ MUSIC 11 

HUD ,0 U ND LTD. 

SPINKY’S MOBILE DISCO LTO.. !! 
Weddings from 8125, 656-1652 < 

“. ’ | c 

■ <8 BUMNMI AKK VICE A 1* 
f| and DIRECTORY ( 

" Accounting Service 

'• ! BOOKKEEPING. MANAGEMENT 

• accounting, part lima for small 

• ous*nesi. Mature man with extan 
,*ive axpantnee in yarlou* Uusi-. 

nesses. 3*2-8307. 

J PUeUC ACCOUNTANT 

r.;Bookkaaplng. accounting, payrolls., 
id financial stat*«n*nfs. ate. 479-4541 

•Ti PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANT 
;:,snd oookkeepar. business consul 
tsnt. pert time, 3*2-07*5 , 

;. Appliance Repair* 

«1 DILLON’S APPLIANCE - " . 
S REPAIR 

< Ail make* and model* 

- 24-HOUR SERVICE j 

L 478-5251, Eve. 474-2490 

s- Gueranteed workmanship. Service 
tr guaranteed to pensioners and low 
rt-1 income people 1 

1 ANDERSON'S APPLIANCE RE-' 
D pnlrs. Washers, dryers, dishwssh- 
In'*r*« snd g*rbur*tors. (Also com., 
n> , m#rcial). Reasonable r a t a s 1 
1 .. 1479-5355. 24 hour service. 

JAMES BAY APPLIANCE FOR 
heavy duty repair*. 3*3-4762. 

0 f Appraisals 


AND R CONCRETE FINISH- u$, 


Brush. Short and tall. Call WESTERN 
-»n cut it all. HOURLY ALL TYPE 

_ OR MONTHLY CON 

TRACT. DEPENDABLE. 


ALL fY>ES OF PAINTING AND LONELY? TRY 

» EXCELLENT RATES may find a 
GUARANTY, FREE Wet's me) ’ 
ES. 595-1233 *0CW 


__ _ CEDAR 

ALDER FIREWOOO SPLIT AND Direct from mill Prices W* vpa- 
dellvered Order now before ” .^?-- es -- cuSt0 ^- 

winter 47»-45*7 or 471-7469 


Mester Cnaroe welcome. 

PAMUS 

Musical Instruments 
1106 Blanshard Tat Fort) 3*6-1475 


< Iranup Senim 


CREATIVE LANDSCAPING 
Designing, and ertiattc layouts. 
Free estimates. Residential, com¬ 
mercial. Maintenance, cleanups. 


SAVE $ $ $ 

sawn^wavev"edge sTdlngVStandard t U(j ranoa o^new^imPuMd^oans 
and better lumber and sidinq. Post and used 

and Beams and round fenceoosH J li6 ®L a jr., fr ? rn . _ . J? 0 .' 


COATIP60 LTD. -jrv^- 77 , ~ ~-— . MIXED FIREWOOD and Beams and round fenceposH i 

FAINTING. AND - T^Vii * 35 a Pickup toed, dellverad. phone No economy or utility grades A5K 0 U oi»5 ENT ,0 0Wf 

13*3-5314. 652-4555. ayallable Phone 642-31*5 or °'* n ' _ 

iScfH drinkSr'only, likes SEASONED ALDER OR MAPLE* : ,n *.---, Glee SOP MuSlC City 

— outdoors, animals, birds, travel !-1 U Hsul. *30 Cord. 642-4455 
EXP. ENGLISH PAINTER mq, seeks like parson for love and -- - - vvr-, — - m - - , 

lot. and Ext., 36 yrs. exp. companionship. Problem with us FUZEWOOO^ ALDER FOR SALE. t 


Paper-hanging, Minor Repairs . is, we are t 


NO CHAROC AND UP 

■ ! Dutch horticultural background. Free Estimates. Anytime 4^-1110 ««. *- >••• f*.* wnf». " , «« 

Lh,■'<?!*“.W«-«*»•«>«•• «»v . 66Si0N mint.no ■ coniWac , '.'“S.'LSJ 

Bob's, 3*6-3451 anytime CUSTOM BRUSH CUTTING AND TOR. RESIDENTIAL COM7/kR- and your likes and dislikes. Would 

1 ■ — ■ ■ — 111 I Ciearlna. Fence rows cleared and ClAL: WORK GUARANTEED re-locate or - - *• 

ALL AREAS srushed. orchards improved, StiN Free estimates. 3*5-604? 

*—ANYTIME I *** 'mW* brush attachments. --- 


ir^flnd someone | MB frucklbad. wVdeii v tr.~iU3- 3696r 

TD1BER 


4ND HAULING. 

II, Eugene s 3*3-3l3* Experienced Chinese gardener, de- 


Fenca rows cleared .and CiAL. _ _ m 

B.M.B PAINTING AND ROOFING - - 

Latimer, Lf{J R#std#f(fla , comm#rc(a (, MATURE 

free esflmates. reasonable retes. apartment 

1 - * |mr > sno< 


I hourly, contact David 


HARVEYS’ LANDSCAPING 

ExoerN 
signing 


redesigning 


Will 


PAINTING PAINTING 
do painting big or small 
on«oie rates. Free estimates 


but *ne! necessari 
Press Box 23. 


wanted timber 

FEIXED. BUCKED or 
STANDING 

Fir. Cedar or Hemlock 


INSULATED ASBESTOS PANELS. HOME OF HAMMOND ORGAN 
4*x 12'; suitable for deck In Insul- - ar| ? HEINTZMAN PIANOS 
ated room system cf insulation 714 Fort 3SB-9537 

panels. *10 per panel. Located in 

Comox, 334-3541. _ PATTYSJ" ‘s 

PLAZA PAINT POT N/lN ^ 

*“ Heintzmon Pianos 

C.I.L. PAINT our SPECIALTY .see the new "Scandie" Warm 

styling in teak 


MAN LIVING NICE 
near but route and 

- -toping centra wishes to meet, f^oi V a.,-Ttil I'T tH 
well educated lady, liberal minded I ,fUM| ■ avvTniu Lt0 
for c lose comP*^ 00 »p|p, «he mu»t CUSTOM LOGGING SELECTIVE- 


1 anytime. 


406 GET READY FOR SPRING ARB YOU LOOKING FOR AN ARE YOU AN ATTRACTIVE. IN- 

MNOOW 1 hav * a • h - p rototlller, no inexpensive.yet experienced paint tel!igent woman who Is vet to 

aualltV ! raa ‘ ,0 ° S' 1 ' 4 ' 1 °f large. M per er? interior or exterior, no job too meet that soaclal person? i am a 

i5?V r '. _ or contract. Phone small. Call Lu(s 3*4-6104, . sensitive, sincere man, age 25. STANDING ANO FELLED 

.i.Li-r.L,;;—who lovee Ufa. outdoors and music, timber wanted. 650-5046. 

— Reply Victoria 


MAHOGANY DOORS. VARIOUS se iect 1.^.. , 
sizes inside eno outside tvoes com i ftne ounos 
piete with hardware. $15-45. AI&o| MAIN FLOOR 

38V0441 varwis Plum b ing fixture s. 593-9*24 _HOME_FURNlplNGS BlDG 
_ NEW ALUMINUM WINDOWS BAND INSTRUMENT LEASES 

payment l | 1h *tai n °sf*? 'cati^ r °° q V ali,v * nd n ** r n *' w 

50 ** ^ t -* 11 I band mUrun'cnts at reason* 1 i r 

767-4127. 1 rates. All payment* appiy to pur 


« w&S. T» A ?r T k« J a T ‘, N .?io® t****'^ 

Phone 595-5933 


---PAINTING 

E JACOBSEN'S GARDEN MAIN- reesonobh 
tenance. Regular lawn and garden anfeed. ‘ 
>aln9a - -- — 


IG AND DECORATING. [etY oet Nwithar 

le rates, satisfaction gu#r- 

Terms. 595 4905. 479-2473. _ —- 


WITH PICKUP. SMALL maintenance, c le a n u 0 . Scan- Akl _ 

PS. anytime Kelly. 38#6,4v d > 2 fvi 6 n work mans hio, oarsonailv AN .° . - "»» wnn. w.n> v 

-- owned and o perated 479-643?._ rwoMBiR rates, free es t t* cwnoenionship 

DUTCH LANDSCAPERS m “ 


lklT __—^ ! SINCERE, ATTRACTIVE WIDOW, 
INTERIOR mi< i forties, with own home seeks 


of a sincere. 


lontractom 

WHEATON 

CONSTRUCnON LTD 
Onpral Contra t.tors 
Building Consultants 
385-570’J 


honest, well-groomed, unattached 
gentleman No trlflers. Victoria 


tlmatea,_656-aB9.__ 

New lawns ciflianups^^ovfmainle- BILL CARR APPLIES VINYL | ' 

xa , oardeni r planting, design- and wall coverings profeuionaiiy wrm1 B0K *• 

. fWirtas. Pree estimates. Waasa aaR 6*»5601. nieet new FRIENDS, LEARN 

—-- SEMI-Rtfi tip. (iii5;v.ify SS® !522 

WILLIAMS LAWN MOWING. I work Albert Roberts. 3lt-56j1 2 ? Th . 

"The best mowtna money can 


' nance, 
471-102 


Bl ILOINtx 8UPPUFH 



Reasonable. 


PnvTnt 


__picks ~Wa**q: 


. Singles 
Spares 
315-4706. 


CHtRMOR CONSTRUCTION LTD 
Conirsct or by the hour Restden r „ r 
flat and commercial renovations 47104*0 
and repairs Sonderk*. ttneinq. ad- I'ZSZL 
dltlons. quality finishing, windows. POWER 
door* steps and concrete work, deem 
Free estimates. 479-7406. 6 o.m 


M5ED GARDINER m biykty, jet^paal^ ng^an d'^etch-, t V t!? < S^aNp^r^. A wp!^ like 
Gard J r, ln q 'ng.uxwtlonal guarantee 479-9118 t 0 meet unattached gentleman 
l by contract G Berta *Her 3._. mid-seventies, similar clrcum 


_ _ „ Duroid Shingles 

'N^ >UO, P.ir7' COr 3l 7 iS! 210 *vt. No. 1 Asphalt 5*11 

!*••!/ All 

NO I per 


0 MISICAL 

INSTRUMENTS 

School Band 
Instruments 


PAMUS 
Musical Instrument* 
i 110* Bl anshard at Fort) 3*6*475 
SACRIFICE 

Kewei electric organ 51B00 uppxr 
and lower keys. 10 rhythms, cas 
< sette tape deck. etc. etc. 477 5*93 
[3834) 773. 

YAMAHA ORGAN, W1TH~‘AUTO- 
meth. base^chorps. almost new 

I CLEAR DRUM" SET, NEW _ 711 
plan^moafs. A-l condition. 5300 

A R R~A TT 


riuterers 

STUCCO 


LICENSED GARDINER 

attar S----' '» mwwi vn«iia.n«u leinem*', .. .a, |. . , 

X5* f ..r?W» contract G Berta after 3. mld-savwitlas. similar clrcum NSULAT ON 

Stances. Please contact Victoria 

Press-Box. 20 ._ ITBLRGLAh.h 

WIDOW, MID-ISLAND, MID-FIP- PRICK PER 1.4*00 SQ FV. 

_ _ _ __ tlas, outgoing, needs to share with 01 >_ 4 " \ 1 ty 

CLARK'S CONSTRUCnON T«iBi g, l ; t,»a»i. 60 &U£ cm ^ i ats.t’!? R 2 D--*" WKJ 

Residential and comwiarclBi fram #nce 343 . 43 ^^ FRIEDRICH PLASTERING AND 1 Wt<Hy Vtctarla Pres s Bax 1 5. R> 8 — 8 ’ 

itklSand'i ddltTo n^eVl - _ ...- o4d * r GENT LEMAN. 43. HAPPY. 

of concrete work. Free es- Cm> * a<l f,>Mlni> home renew*I *56-2064._healthy and broadminded seek* rvMA r Cf>Cr~IAl 

- es New concrete Strip-easy WINDOWS™ COLEMAN PLASTERING VP coup,# *^^ Vic ' GYPRO^ SPcCIAL 

Forms for rent. 479-5020. Cheng, wood to aluminum s.ngla ‘* at *- p,aa,ar and "UK* m ” 74 ~ Prt ‘ V ' 2 

rtoinrro fo ^bermo with Everbrite Phone STUCCO AND PLASTER PATCH- t-ONELY LADY, 23, WOULD 

CRAMER 3*4-1423. 65MI17 evenings. ina X V.arx .xnarl^r. i 77 1 All »ke fo .meet rlncere respectable 

Residential and CommvcialRw n ;31 ~~ ~- gBP. some means. KIRK STOP 


colours in stock. carc>’ the lanrest ‘ to, ''\piav«^ oiano. rusi 
12195 of renlals on Vancouver Ib-,«t*-6io*. 


land. We al*. service "hat E * K 


wc rent or sell. 


S*!20 


^ELSON’S 

J^i Jusic 


jBELLS FOR SALE. SUITABLE 
I tor Elementary Schoot band 
47B-H51. 

. ARMSTRONG FLUTE. EX 
; cellent conhMion, *2C0 firm. *350 
new 474-1740. 

MELODIGRAND APARTVR-.' 
sized oiano, excellent condition 
*500. 477-0310. 


vations Test^ end efficTem skilled tiutter Cteanlnc ami Repair 
^ n 32* b ' # r#t# * W^THeTtiME-TOTlET.US 


Plumbing and Heating 


Victoria Pros* 


13H Gtvtrxment 385-9721 

Price pet 1.000 S M Ki . |f - XA/ n , A w , Ar c 

’ GYPROC Sl’jn NEW rIANOb FOR sale b flat clarinet 

$60 479-0416. 


wanted 

-Iwitn banch, « 
lean 595-6921 


$148 


.. Naads to be t 
and good nutrlf 
Victoria Praaa 


, week 1 REAL CSlATE APPRAISALS 

ifor taxation - Estates - Expro- ,385^29:1 
priatlon - Sale. K.M Porter, 

- (B.C.),- -* 


T. * C. BUILDERS LTD 
Framing 

n ,8T>-8bS7 


artTB re «^g vnsstR 

tor me fan season very reason- g.ferences. 47G-1G41. logs and return evanli ‘ 


tor the fall season 
able. All work 
3*0 4295 


STD FIR PLY 


Hand.* men 


♦a b*°R»er?$«d IC^ KnowiesRealty Ud*°i4-*l01 Oer Design end amtruction. Custom . _ J °HN_THE HANDYMAN _ 

M -•‘trttlcn. tsM "~ n - • —- — ■ _ guilt interiors end furniture Quali- lournevmen, electrician. Jack of 

Box tvT APPRAISALS IfT w^kJnTrihl^ wtltJSto*. all ^Trades." Pty^ 595-4*42. If no 

34 J. 7440 . answer call 30* 4413. 


DAVID’S PLUMBING 

For all your plumbing needs 
including HW tanks. 386-INI 


TS inSrto 1x8- S T and C, S1J M) 1 
3 , 4 ' MI 0 :1x8-»* Std. $10.25 

FANS LIKE TO SEE Std. $ 7.6f 

Memphis with fellow fans. Will be 4x8 3 * Std. $14.50 

t. meet I no Writ# name and phone 


ings 
High 
or 3*4-8311. 

ELVIS 


FROM $1169 

Used Pianos 

FROM $795 


$- 3840. 

FLAT BOOSEY 


.... EX 
£-7052. 

ROLANO SYNTH 


REISCH. 
“1. 595-7052 


LansdownB Properties Ltd. 


ANY TYPE OF PLUMBING REA- 

sonatle r*tes. reliable plumber.' number to Victoria Press, Box 19 
24-nour service. 477-5742. 


351* Esteven Ave. 592-2431 


PARTTIME LICENCED PRAC 
heal nurse, or aide, private duty, zs 

3-U p.m. Good workino conditions.- = 

Vic toRa Press Box 34. _) P 

a AY £n ^ <-*»»^ ' “«■ •» 

area. 1-3 day* weakly. 3*5-9394. 

MODELS REQUIRED FOR HIGH 
fashion hair cutting by Friends 
a nd Company. 38M61*. 

PART TIME SECURITY WATCH- 
man, Saturday and Sunday nights. 

59*0326._ 

PARTIMB DELIVERY GIRL FOR 

‘- * ' m, 1*67 * ‘ 

WANTED; PART tTmeT" 

tired bartser. 3456 Quadra. 


,*IT£ COmtJUCTWjS - *» E r "SY* T '?SSc.r’'‘iY'£f*25 Us 

mglg- ^ l<wr •T***- »««*: . whin m o 


DIAL A-PRAYER 

RENOVATIONS. D.sfre.wd,discouraged. 


B| 


BOSSOM 

•LASS n. LTD 


CONVERpTO T^HER MO GLASS! 


Bricklayer* 


!1 EMPLOYMENT 
SERVICES 

ADVERTISEMENTS in“ 
'HRS CLASSIFICATION 
MUST COMPLY WITH 
THE 

BRITISH COLUMBIA 
HUMAN RIGHTS ACT 


YEARS EXPERIENCE. ALL 
- brickwork,, phone Doug r~ 

" 975. 


25 

tyt- 

lime, 479-597! 


CabUiet Making 


KITCHEN CABINETS, 

bathroom vonities. countertops, 
all custom built, or rifecing old - -- 
cabinets with new modern designs, tlmate*. phone Ron. 3*2-2630 
with low price For free estimate f ~ ^ ~~ 

can 479-7245. Dmpnfinn 


---i lIBnlfa 

FRANKLIN’S CONSTRUCTION- 

Sunjecks. gutter, fencing, addi- CLEANUPS ANO 
lions, renovation*, steps, windows, sand, gravel, top soil, 
doors. 3*3-2733. gene s 3*3-352*. 5fe-77S3. 


tWO TOP-NOTCH SIDING QUICK SERVICE - ALL TYPE 
crews. Free estimates. Call any- cleanups, ate. Call Fong, 479-707*. 
time: 383-8570. _j 3*44* ?U_ 

LASTING CONSTRUCTION. GEN-' 
erel contractor* Sound work 
manshlp and oaslj w. 3*3-6579. 

farmeiT construction 

Design — Rartovatlon* 


_MB ONE EL$r SEEMS G.l.S 

'aifwfejspwa ;• 

59 $-*056 _iUP-HLANO LOGGER SEEKS PE-iJIj*®’ * 

ANY TYPE OF PLUMSING, REA-;™* ^ 301 S 4 yj ' , il 

sonable ratas, reliable plumber Write Victoria Prow Boa 38._ $21.50 V 

24-hour service. 477-5742. C ARES IF VOU ARE 

oreonant? Birthright does Phqpe 
4-1431. 


SANDED FIR 
4X8 PLYWOOD 


HAWKE S 

Value and Selection | 

ELECTRIC orpan. $770. open to 
offers. 3*3-7946 attar 6 p.m 

PIANO FOR~SALE~$*00 FIRM 
I *3* 2376 or 3*2-7639 after 4 


Are Tops At 


SOUND OF MUSIC 
PIANO AND ORGAN 
Fnrtnrv I CENTRE 

$ 7,K 1517 Quadra 
S 10.95; must sell conn 


J2-10 60 BASE PIANO ACCORDION 
Hohnar. *11*. 479-5*70 


_ Wmm, PRELUDE 

$ 1’951 organ (with built-in rhythm sac- 
lion). Excellent condition, *1650. 
$16.JO Phone 477-6)09. 


Roofing and Siding 


IRWIN INDUSTRIES LTD. ALU- QU'ET FEMALE SECKS SAME 4x8—o-lt 
minum siding, solid vnyl siding. Victoria Press. Box 2S. i^ %< 

5" continuous gutters. Phone - 1 -—» 

3*26)54 lor free asflmates <0 g(JRINV81l PERSONALS ***—'* 

PARKER JOHNSTON LTD.--j IvS—S 

1*55 BLANSHARD. 3*2-9111. 'W CO ? PO * ATE L , lv « sr 

"Roofing Victoria Since 1935* ^y 1 ^* supervised ” f ^ ,al f'_ W ur •* x ‘> 


Home Imprnvrmrnts 


SOMERSBY 

FRAMING CREW. LOW RATES, i"tiVm*ASPHALT SHINGLING, CEDAR over 
656-1164 . 656 3460 anytime. m ^vthino Tn w^T F;m«^ ■ »hakas. and carpentry done, free Coyn 

5 -=—---estimate, phone Ron, 3*2-2630 12 * 


3** • 


D UNSANDED 


^ | Nylon strung. 592-0709. 

$ J-i5 
S 6.75 


4PARTMENT SIZE PIANO, 
good cg nBR io a 6700 642-4182. 

SILVER TONE CHORD 
or 3 an 72 bas*. 3*4-95*5 

PAN ALTO* SAXAPHONE GOOD 
condition, open to otters. 3*6-1*75 


rtemoiltloa 


DEMOLITION AND REMOVAL 
of all types of structures, 


rnrp*nler» 

IJUlLT kND REF^- 

__Jtlons end small add! 

. We also do plumbing repairs 

iorkr Will -' 


SUNDECKS, 
qtred, renovations 

tlons. We also do ____ 

and concrale work: Will supdv 
references on request Free esti¬ 
mate? end all workmanship 
guaranteed. 47*-»60. _ 

CUSTOM CARPENTERS 
• r*^n OQC Sneciellsts In fine finlshina car- 

La 11 JOD-o4ZJ Dentry and cabmef work. Let us 

- ... - -—--- design vour iritchen, library, ftome 

30 SITUATIONS WANTED r 3 * f J 0 2 V ; 5y° ns Tarrv ,IMrd 

COMPETENT SECRETARY “WITH F j CONSTRCfrTlON ~ “ALL 
B.C. and B.Ed. 20 years secreler- L r ,. J ^’'"^iion ._pu. 

ial arvH laarklfln avnarUn/a Am. f 


HOURIGAN’S 

Floor Coverino soeciaiists 

CUSTOM 
DRAPERIES 
—Bedspreads 


_316-6645 I 

SLUGGETT A BROWN 
JOINERY LTD. 
Windows, doors and frames. 526 
Discover y SI. 3*2-3011 

READY MIX 

I Small load cement products. 2629 
I Nobn.ll Road 471-3572. Monday-Sa- 
turtfay, Sund*v by appointment 
after 5 p.wy 3*5^2 85. _ 

Janitor Smlie 



your 

__ itfen 

_ iwtrcMi BaR-i 

ounsel Services toll-free 
112-*00-663-3007. Charoex and Mas- 
fercharge accepted _ _ 

VICTORIA'S 
ESCORTS 

3*4-3931 — 1 * hr*. 

NO CASH?' 

Some homes available with _ _ 

12x00—X--24- 

it over with ROB ANGUS 652-2574, 2x12— 8’— 
National Trust 595-2171. 


$ 8.95 

I 9.951 
$12.25! 


Framing 

Lumber 

STD. & BTR. FIR 

2x4—92L Pet stud " 5289 
2x4—8’ -20’ $299 

2x8—8’—14’ 

$r.o 

$:’,5U 


THE ACES* 


ON BRIDGE 

by 

Q CONN JN 
tiam captain 


Vinyl 


Dre^snidklng 


fSyt c .!Tnm,*rf&^sr» *' 

•Ires to locate In area. Versatile Privafr «nd commercial. Free es - j«r «u ” 

*- Fred Jorgensen 


Seif-Startar. Rapid shorthand. At- tlmalM. Call 

fractva _ apftaraAc» . 642-3075. 


112-414-354-2910, collect 
5435 River Rd. No. 5, 

Fills, Ontario L3E<3H1. Available 


Niagara , PERM A CONSTRLV1TON 
allab 1 


WILLING. CHEERFUL, HARD- 
v.orkar, .yanaoi. ^wfu.MI^- RENOVATIONS, 


’'Wt build Ph our Reputation■' 
Alterations — New Construction 
FREE ESTIMATES, 3*4-3323 


KING'S KLEANING _ 

Windows, Floors, Carpets 
Complete residential service 

3*2 4209. 595-55*6 __ 

** ^ 'CERTIFIED J a N 1 T O R* wiTH “n"^XrTtfnq.''” fV"'T ree“ eitTmetes ? 

•ouipment and insurance Will work Doug 478-7552 J*?* 

3*^5610* T*Jek e Fr'f n, ? l *a VINYL STIC FIBERGLASS DJCK | 3*4-6ll0. _ | 

* 3 A u P*u?c\Y^: 

barker w^iiav* ™ gjffi r’Hrftg 1 - a. 

ALTERATIONS. MEN S AND WO- LANDSCAllNG LTD. |__WOU»fc U fT TR y.^NATURAL ! 

men's _c lot hint. ?0 years' txpori- Qua I It.ad design services, expert SUPERIOR VALET SERVICE knowledge of the art of mxssegt 
3*2-3*05. workmanship, l*wn specialists. Aiferations. -wi— *7?"‘" ar,t . 

-—4-— ----- r# fjf-— --- 


. made anywhere | 
VancouN er Island nr.d 


QUICK relief eor discom- Deliveries 
fort of mouth sores whfte canker 
soots, dental Plate sores, tandsr 'Ml 

snoJaries *'•"* ^ ’r- v 

tory approved applicators, CMHC Pharmacy and ether, pharmacies, compare OUT prices. ro’ i 


children's oarments -for sal*, all 
new materials, reasonable 
483-0529. 


LMnaMcaplnu 


sound production, qu-dlty, servic* and guarjn- 
“wSSte; teed savirtgs. phone; 

386-33/4 
385-8711 


ence. Phone 3*2-3*05. 
ALTERATIONS AND 


tic- work Skills In typing, short- # tc ~ over - 25 VM ,. 

B^M d a t Jwl^MSit ,C ph^Mir ©*' a,,, Y workmanship, by the hour! 
ar * 15 f.2, of>a War ’ or contract. Phone 652-4612 or 
ior> - 3*3-;614, 313-3931._ 656-4079 evening*- _ 

!2Sf5S?t!2fiw EXPERIENCED FRAMER, CAP 

B5ia B!yOT as.afe anJEenk^gre 
^ sik ?. , tsBkr ; a sy | " c - 

XoMAN^ iKK T R ERM A NE N T 

j »•' ' SWA.* 


ALTERATIONS, don# at homa. 479-7925. 
years axjNjrlance 


-mammy. iowm __ __ . w 

sewing •g'nj* ,n8 i , ~^*L^ < !??!_? rv .. c,aa - n ^94 o.a p 




o n vo ur job ? as 

’satlie 'bwn transpor- • CARPENTER 
* after 4 p. 


'MU 1 


RELIABLE, 
cleaning. 


housed toning, of farad, 
hours every 6 
■■*■. Referi 


WfTH 10 YEARS 
ex;>eriance win do renovatlont, ai- 
ev.t a .iLir en terations. No iob too small. Call 
K E i P6 *4 R 50 eN h C r Et i Cnrls._652.M19 


walls, pools, .compaiifive price*, rata* 616 Admiral*. 

--- OAR BAY TAILOR? 

3*5-8)98 Tailoring, alteration* ladle*- and 

—— ■ ■ - — ■ r - -- -; 4 BROTHERS w ALL AREAS men Quality igethar altarations 

"SPRAYMAN" 1 FREE ESTIMATES - ANYTIME 1*3* Oak Bay Avt 59* 4131 

Sooclall/lng in all Naw ff. 9ae »| New iawn_praparation». seeding, 


repair* dressmakano. w | th you. victor!* Press Box 36. 

'*•** "'lanlna. A * 1 -- 

B3-3211 


l»r>wall 




MAUDE'S MAIDS. THOROUGH, 
efficient home or ©file* cleaning 
weekly bi-wegkly, etc. 3*4-»49 j | 


JUBIL6E BUILDING 
SUPPLIES Ltd. 


lure ceilings and wall*. *atl»fac -1 rototllllng. Bobcat sarvlca. 
jghfjgatftgd. 652-3601. PROFESSIONAL ROTpVATING' 

HOLLANDIA ORYWALL 20 «nd landscape work, serving Seen- 
years exparience In quality work. , C h Peninsula, reasonable prices.. 
Phone 479-7641. * 652-5753. evenings. 


SERVICE 

Treat" 


tr.) 


wife. 


WORK - PAINTING, 
cleaned, lined, rapblrad. 


CASUAL 
out ter* 
Cnii 


afternoon V E R S A T I L E HOME MAIN- 
available, tamer carpentry, renovations, 
cabinets, p^lntln^ papering, ouail- 


ty work. Adam. 


nance. 
WATERPROOF 


NHPNVW cement 
finishing, drainage, bricklaying, 
atone, carpentry, pointing. A hear, 


FEMALE, 14, SEEKS PART-TIME 
office lob. Typing, payroll*, post 

aLw anLip ^ 

BOOKKEEPING 


QWfVfSt 

end Accounting, woykiy or 
ly, complete to Wwa n del 
mentt. Telephone 47*4454. 


DAY CARE AVAILABLE FOR 

school aged children in my ap- 
provtoTJgja. Tllllcwm School 


RELIABLE 
day* In n 
tockhaightt 


DAYCARE. WEEK- 
v hem#. Eeouimeit- 


GARDEN CITY WOODWORKING 
Kitchtn cabinet*. Vanities 
Remodelling and counter top* 
George coutla*, 479-4730 


SKIP'S 

sonable . .. — 

Maxonry 479*342 

ROBERT G HELLER ELEC- SPECIALIZING IN FIREPLACES. MT. VIEW TREE 

trie, vary reasonable rate* Bn re- facing, retaining well*, steps. ( fcvervtningjn 

-*-■*' driveway, drainage Inttalltd F ull# Ineured. «f*-3 

_1 CUSTOM FALLING AND TOP- 

TAVERES STONEWORK, FIRE- ping Fyllv Insured 3*5-7013 any 
■ piece*, retaining walls, brick 1 time 
r YOU HAVE SMALL ELEC-‘work, Hat* work, call anytime — 
leal wiring lobs? No one Is Inter- 593-4647. 

Iftm P ''“ iSV-fSiSS—iN 

— • block, chimneys, 


WOULD YOU LIKE TO MEET 
British custom tailors new people? See Single* Happen- 
TAI j|V$* 3 ) inn Victoria Comlno Event* Col- 

NEED - M OR E~fI^EE - T TmE? - FOR 
tmen fee I'll aei end deliver 
erlei ‘ 


1311 BLANSHARD 

Trre Nervier 


TREE 


Rlectflral ( onirai ture 


rric, very reesonaDie re res or re¬ 
vering or new construction, addi¬ 
tion*. electric heating, residential 
or commercial 471-4033 

ais-sus 


REMODELING. REPAIRS AND 
renovation*, residential and com- 
mercla i. Free eetimetee. 477-73H 

EXPERIENCED CARPENTER 
will do renovettone and small con¬ 
st* loo*. 477-7762 after 4. 

CnrpHa and Unolram 


m 


RELIABLE BABYSITTER MV 
horn* Mondev Friday Qwectre 
School area 3I2-5217 


PARKER. 
JOHNSTON 

LTD. 

t*M BLANBMANO tB3-*1*1 

OtTTDOOR TURF 
CARPFTING 
$4,99 SQ YD 
CARPET REMNANTS 
PRICF, ! ! ! 


t%. 


HYPNOSIS 

BY BILL BOYCHUK 
Call 5*5-17*3 from 18 ajh.-noon 

MRS, FAYN-JONS1, TRANCE 
medium, question* 

385-2603 


BRICK OR 

^pi— . .. flrapiecae, *nd 

OLDER HOMES REWiRED —, NO l house teeing*, etc. Phone 3*2-797$. 
down payment Wa finance ef 3 —rrr 

otnk rttti with bo proved credit. <25 YEARS EXPERIENCE, ALL 
EDDV^ EL E CTRIC - 3NF7666 1 brickwork, Phone Doug any- 

HARPER ELECTRIC ; fireplace spec ial i^st__ ?rV»t*m*n 


BIG WIND TREE SERVICE 
low r ate* 3W -6115 

Upholat^ry 


I TEACUP, CAR 
handwriting, horosc 

Sr„?S°A: 51*814. 1 


IJ^ 4 

RE AdTnG. 1 u,e 
and nu- 


OLYMPIC STAIN 
Buy 3 Gals. -- Get 4 Gal*. 

Aug. 26-Seirt. 9 
Gall the Expert* 
for a Free Estimate 
on Diamond 
or MERIT CABINETS 
i Opposite Town A Country 
next to MacDonald* Bakarv) I 
OPEN SATURDAY 10-3 P.M 
<4 Ciildutnel Rd. 3*8-5417 


acT upholstery 

nrtz Dhnn* TdMifl inv- 0^S3 | *OX >11 0._j 


^•ncaf^^iaotrician, raOortoi 20 veer * experien ce - 4 7B-8B75 


JOHN THE HANDYMAN 
JOURNEYMAN ELECTRICIAN 
69 5 4*43 If no answer. 3N-44I3 


>lo\tng and Storage 


LICENSED ELECTRICIAN < 
do now wiring, rewiring, 
reoelr. 479-97*5. 


MOVING? 

j ANO L 

MOVING AND STORAGE LTD. 
Full storage facilities. Boxes sup 
pl (rturiiN—Meat es. i co»t- ResWentlel or com- 

agfiagy ."a*R%S» 

I isrfej? rz;?? 

ItS? 25" J weekend*, holiday* Exceptional 

troiiad ^ h ° Uf ,ad *° c I rale* 3 *4-6916,_ 

6 K Trucking Co. Ltd t rank s OFLIVPRY 

i Mov* end pickup delivt 
rMunible rales M7-S 


FURNITURE UPHOLSTERED 
end repilrid, workmen*h(o 
euerenteed. rae*onebie rate*, free 
e • 11 m a 1 e * . 3M-5936, evening* 

3*6-8670. 


i estimate. 




education 


(Jpholatdry 

iSCMTERY"^"tA1 
Fro# estimates. Old coun 


ford-Northridga-Royai Oak area) 
— has openings In 3 and 4 year old 
DME. classes. For more Information | 


Window Cleaning 

WINDOWS - WASHEO! AVERAGE 
house $9 Call 471 *461. Thank you. 


TKAV1.L 


1 BEDROOM CONDO WAIKIKI 
SepL Ut-35tto. Nov lst-1 Jth, and 
efte^eb 20th, 479-9522. 


TUTORING - F ROPE $• ION AL 
hein by axparlancad teacher. 

French, math, new and old mettv 
o d*. 5H-7331 _ I 

FOREST GLEN PLAYKHOOjL, 
ooemngs for 3 and 4 year olds, I 
Cordo va Bay. .65M673 
LEARN POTTE-RV ON THE ! 

ClMM * *-““|j956 Dougl.4 


Citation 

.cabinet 

ON I - NEW HUn'tj 
tr Showroom Dlsplav 

^ < &&F' woq6 

• II'" • • ” »*9 »m| 

ilMPERIAL 

BMIJBH MATHHMJ UBl 


386-1601 


"To bo successful, 
you’re got to be willing to 
fail. ” - Frank Tyger. 

In today's slippery 
game, declarer wa* frilling 
to tail auoerably for the 
one chance he had for hi* 
contract. He was lucky in 
the sense that hi* flimflam 
worked, but luck had noth¬ 
ing to do frith his imagina¬ 
tive solution. 

West didn’t relish any 
lead against South's ambi¬ 
tious gam* effort. A major 
suit lead would have 
beaten the contract quick¬ 
ly. srhile a club lead would 
have given the game away. 
West decided on a middle 
course (he thought) and he 
made the neutral lead of a 
trump. 

Declarer was Gordon 
Maroney of Texarkana, 
Texas, and he studied his 
chances after winning the 
trump lead in his own 
hand. Obviously, there 
were three major suit 
losers and the only legiti¬ 
mate chance lay frith find¬ 
ing either defender frith a 
doubleton club king. 

If so, declarer could ruff 
a low club in dummy, re¬ 
turn to his hand with a 
trump and than discard 
two of dummy’s heart 
losers on the ace-queen of 
clubs A spade lead to¬ 
wards dummy’s king 
would establish a spade 
winner and a shaky 11 
tricks irould come in. 

Plaring for a doubleton 
club king and the spade 
ace to be right would re¬ 
quire a minor miracle, so 
Maroney chose a more 
flamboyant play. 

At trick two. ba placed a 
defiant club queen on the 
table and, when West 
didn't cover (a forgivable 
mistake), he let the queen 
ride, discarding a heart 
from dummy Had East 
held the Hub king, the nuw 


♦ K»*4J 

9 10 8 2 

♦ KQ 1*7 4 

♦ ... 


RAflT 

♦ A 782 ♦Q18J * 

*K*« t* A J I 7 

62 ess 

♦ K108I3 ♦ J • I 4 

801.TH 

♦ J 

9 QS3 
S A J 9 I 8 

♦ AQ73 

Vulnerable: Both De 
er: South. The bidding: 


Weet 

as- 


s w> 


All 


Opening lead: Deuce of 
diamonds. 

would have cost an extra 
100 points and the laughs 


As it waa, declarer drew 
one more trump and then 
discarded another heart on 
his club ace and the de¬ 
fense was held to only one 


South holds: 8-22-R 


♦ Q 185 
9 A J i 7 

e is 

♦ Jilt 


2 ♦ 


1 NT 

19 . ? 

ANSWER Three hearts, 
with four hearts a close 
second choice. The hand is 
worth a eery good nine 
points in support of hearts 
and the game Invitation 
should be a solid bet. 


* a 


4 


4 


4 



































































































































































































































































































V 


\ 


20 


iMil.l LUUAMS! \1 v<04I«. 


. xi(uiiia> lti<3 


MOTORfTYCLfcB 


YAMAHA # 

rD All C A I C ^ 


** npATW Ml MARIN E j M BOATS and MARINE 4M BOATS and MARIN F M BOATS and MARINK m 

mom. LAST OF THE 


TODAY’S CROSSWORD PTISU 


TRAIL SALE 

11 only DTI00 R*g. S8G9 


THUNDEABIRD 
YACHT • 
SALES 


NEW GLASS BOATS! 

I Cormorant SOLO 


LTSBff 


LISTINGS 
SAIL 


ACROSS 
1 Gam# lor 
two 

8 Europaan 
10 Poker hold 
ing 

14 Usage 

15 Axis' ax 


16 Actor Ray 

17 Maka ra 
paration 

18 Musical pro 
ductions 

20 Clock dial 
number . 

21 Entice 

23 


48 Sieves 

50 Currant 
month. 

Abbr 

52 Austrian 

53 Animal an 
cldsure 

56 Overlook 

57 Raaort 

60 Having bean 


UNITED Fwtturw Syndicate 


.62 aar 

64 Arizona city 

65 Tar sourca 

66 Cut’s proc 
lamation 

67 Upright. 
Prefix 



i 1 only DTI75 Reg *1339 

Now 51199 

2 only DT250 Rag. 51579 
\ Now 51399 

jf Inc. Fr. and P.D.I. 

MULLINS 

MARINE 

SALES LTD 
382-1928 D-00365A 

925 Yates St 


^ S799 & |an2|t|r Weekender tii.ns cal ft. turn 74. voive piasai in- 


EXP BRIBNCED 
GLASS BOATS 

tfO** 


Poor rBBtau 

98 Fastener 

13 Bright 

45 Remove* 

rant 

69 Encamps 

19 Jagged 

forcibly 2 

24 JaBy for 

DOWN 

22 Disquiet 

words 

lamb 

1 Converse 

24 Bare 

47 Form of 

25 Unskilled la 

2 Strong drs 

25 Sketch 

address 

boraf 

like 

26 Of a branch 

Obs 

28 Pr*ctica per 

3 Black Poet: 

27 Baffle 

49 Sent down 

for mane* 

4 Do wrong 

28 - Gabler 

51 Strikes with 

30 Small booth 

5 Alaskan peek 

29 Ward off 

the hand 

34 Against 

2 words 

31 Home 

53 Perry 

35 Bouquet 

6 Diversions 

32 Canada 

54 and out" 

holder 

7 Easy gait 

Now Quebec 

56 Take it easy 

37 Python 

8 Malt bever¬ 

33 Disembarks 

56 Bill of fare 

38 Designed 

age 

36 Takes ille 

57 Jazzman 

39 Perfume 

9 Brink 

gaily 

Getz 

41 Community 

10 Exclusive 

40 Throw 

58 Bore 

42 Append 

right 

41 Freight 

59 War god 

43 Headliner 

11 Can prov. 

units 

61 Mr Carson 

44 Eaten away 

12 Castor t 

43 Fr upper 

63 Midi guitar 

46 Rent 

flayer 

house 

Abbr 


For the Dirt 

Sava 

On All 

HONDA 

Trail Bikes 
This Weekend 

SPECIAL $2.00 

Dirt Bike T-Shirts 
With Any Purchase 

See us last . . . 

Before you buy 

VICTORIA 

HONDA 

2851 Douglas 386-8364 

DL41963A 

Open ’til 9 p.m Frt. 

HONDA 

TRAIL SALE 


fr ca pi preform sij.joo 

?? SANGSTER SUtoO 

24' BELLBOY itm 

24' F.G. Diesel (watac taxi) $11,500 
24 C B REINELL $13,200 

24' REINELL. 65 hr*. $13,600 
26' F-G STARCRAFT $13,600 

l 26' C-B HOURS TON $11,500 

26 TU.STAR C-B *16,600 

26' SEDAN FIBRE FORM $11,900 
20' C B FFIBREWORMTwin 130.500 
30' CG CARVER Tain SWAOO 
ft* TOLLCRAFT, Tain $31to0 


CHALLENGER 73 41000 3 »*U* 
berths. Mercury 6.0 « • ~ a fi 

Irom $9,000 to $7 900. 


ALBIN 25 Built '74. Volvo diesel 
4 Berth*. CB radio. esper furnace 
Replacement veiue $3i 000 $24,too 


78's 



BOATS end MAfUNT 

BEST PRICES ON 
CVINRUpE 
DOUBLE EAGLE 
ROADRUNNER 


Very extenw* Invfntqrv *60.000 


CATALINA 

NATIONAL BOAT SALES LTD 
have been appointed victor i* ere* 


•gent tor tho CATALINA RANGF 
OF SAILING CRAFT you or# in 
vitod to Inspect e CATALINA n 


CLASSIC & 

DISPLACEMENT 

Proud Line-Up 

IT GLES L Cabin 0-0 $ f.450 --- x — ~ . - 

26' CHRIS CRAFT * 6.000 Coned* eeonl* for Grand 

27' RICHARD $ 0,600 F) *her, Moody. Afeln. Situ. 

27'CHRIS CRAFT $15,600 Se.delmoon, PacHk Pitot 

30' CHRIS CRAFT clean, lain | * DICK CHUDLET 
- er LUKE KVNASTON 

NATIONAL 
Boot Soles Ltd. 

2060 White Birch Road 
Sidney. B.C. 

VIL '•O 4 ' 65A3V66 

AND ALSO AT 
Felee Creek, Van. 


$76X00 

32' CHRIS CRAFT Cle*»lc *24.500 
32' C-B ORENFELL $43,600 

35 DISPLACEMENT (Selon) 

$10 500 

SAILBOATS 

I 10 Wood SLOOF 

20 CAL 
77' CATALINA 

24' SLOOF (e staal) 

26' TILLICUM 
32' BAYLINER 

ASK FOR JOHN NEUFELD 
_ • 636-SS32 _• 

Just Arrived 

1979 

CAMPIONS 



pacific iMaurmtao ittrei itb 


l2 250 Reg. 5559 
1 CT7D Reg. 5719 


*1 

l 

r 

n— 

ii 

IT- 

I 



















Now 5 519 
Now S 639 
2 XR75 Reg, 5759 Now 5 689 
12 XL75 Reg. 5769 Now 5 699 
2 XLOO Reg 5989 Now 5 939 
2 CT125 Reg. 51199 Now 5939 
2 XU75 Reg 51339 Now 51249 

MULLINS 

MARINE 

SALES LTD 

382-1928 D-00365A 

925 Yates St. 


at 197.8‘PRICES 

—16’ SevsWh \ 
deluxe model 
—full camper top 
-56 Johnson elec. 

- 1200 Roadrunner 
faotory Hat 56286 
PACKAGE 


A COMFLETE STOCK OF 
FIBERGLASS 
AND 
EPOXY 

Materials 

2 SPAR 

MARINE PALNTS 
428 E. Burnside 
VICTORIA 

386-1811 386-7814 


15550 


HARBOUR 
MACHINE LTD. 


14' K&C 

—74 40 hp Merc elec. 
—800 Road Runner 
—full top. speedometer 
—S.S. md holders 
rigged, readyy to *) 

$3,795 
16' K&C 

76 65 hp Merc elec. 
lJpO Road Runner 

- full top 

- rigged, ready to go 
to choose from 

$5,295 

VI75 

CANAVENTURE 

120 Mercruuer 1-0 
• complete 
instrumentation 

- full top 

rigged, ready to go 

1 ONLY, $7,495 

GOOD SELECTION of 
USED BOATS and 
OUTBOARDS 

ffkicufij 

marine 

800 Cloverdole 
385-1457 

VAN ISLE 
MARINA 

POWER 


SUZUKI 

79*s ARE COMING 

BIT ... 

We still have a few 
’78’s at great prices 
See them Now at: 


17'6" ALERT Hardtop 
—deluxe model 
—camper back 
—70 Johnson elec. 

■- ISO Road Runner 
- factory list 57982 
PACKAGE 


20 F-G inboard 22 Chris Craft. 22' 
F.berlorm, 24' See Ray, 24'| 

“ Buoy. 75' Saneeter C-Bric— 

fhria r K ( am 


/C'W *•* wh * u 

tW mtmrim* Ud. 


HRYSL1R - VOLVO 
Marine ee* end diesel engine* 

Complete Propeller end Shaft 

repairs «..._— -... 

One day service when nece**ery 2S Chrl* Ceft. 26' Campion, 26' 
u»tom Machine and Welding work Troian, V DNpl. Cruiser. 7V 
31 Erie Street 313-6555 Chrl* Crett 2T F-G Comd. Bridge 

- ; - »’ Fhllbrook*. IT GrenfeH. JO' 

Bv lw4 i U E n Trawler. JO' Chris Crgff. fr F-G 

v v y KakS hlrmnc fSapphire, 37* Telly. J2' Coronet 
» oLrd Tr 32 ‘ CM' *•» Cony.. J4' Dleeel Ol»pi . 

Mav Chr, » W Monk. 3$ 

I715C Ariiiers aJSSX* Meaner, 40' Trl-CeWn. 40' Monk. 

r’vsssi. «.» "■ D '-' »• «• 

e»«e^ leave offer* «t the Marine • cr *"- 
office. 




, SALES ANO SERVICE 

c ~ w X*3r 5 ,. D "S! eT*—" 


DJ YACHTS 


SAIL 

21 Norwe*»er. 2T Crown 26' Raw- 
*on. 26' TrtMerer. U" Grpmplon, 
26' Tenier, 77' Cle**ic, 76* Martin. 
Joyce Omiid end Don White — »' Gremolen. 3 1 Samson Sloop. 
- Marine 666-5556. Rendv 37* Atkin*. 40' Centre Cockpit, 47' 


FMDERICK 
MOTOR* LTD 


By R. A. POWER 


616 Queen* .18340U I 

EKM34A 

HARLEY- 

DAVIDSON 

■S No. X fiik. 

No. 3 Servica 
No. 1 Dealer 
See Us Last 
Before You Buy 

VICTORIA 'HONDA 

2851 Douglas 

DLr01953A 
Open til 9 p.m. Fri 


1 HAVE A C 
RROKE 

lOODWEI 
RAGE CD 

[£] 

EXEND ' 
USED |j 

"Located 

Betr 

W** Horn 

GBMR 

URI1U 

on »h* Hlom 

"air 2> l 8 

# tor TOLLY 
in Victoria 

i . ( 

eey tuft 

*v 

TRAFT 


Boyle - 

m. 


Oak Bey Marine' 
Pedder Bay Marine 


Lunenburg Ketch. 


Heavily built 


or. Heavily 
on oak fo 


A'e*t Coe*t _. 
mi ell ranee. 

i •mieteoie. E._ 

renqe. 1 month moorepe 
656-7146. H m 


fridge. VHF, DS. 
xteneive crui*jng 


For tneee end many other fine 11*1- 
~ ing*. pieeae contact JOHN ALLEN 
01$- «t: 

VAN ISLE MARINA CO. LTD 

Box 7130 
Sidney BC 


-.— tho Tsehum Harbour 
elr cooled die 656-1136 

Ux ,/ur r* c 


Rep)owcr 
At Sea Power 


ng lecHille* for ell make* get end 
diesel; reason able rates All work 
fuiy guaranteed 656-4341 

BOATERS’ 

SEE OUR large display of ape’l- 
ances, plumbing end electrical 
*upp4»ev 

_ w ^-, FEDEN R V. LTD. 

tax » 70U Queanei - 

* - - Behind Emoreee Pontiac Bulck 


MERCURY 

SALE 


"If i the Service 
That Seta Ua Apart 

1979 

BAYLINER 

SANTIAGO 

Offshore Hardtop 

140 Volvo f.w.c. 

—fully enclosed cuddy 
cabin 

- complete galley 
marine head 

—8’ beam 

•See it in our showroom this 
weekend! 

USED 

PACKAGES 

1 T Hourston ( # 74) 

—140 Mercruiaor 
—2 pee. camper top 
1800 Road runner 

$5,995 

2T Reinell Sedan 

188 Mercruiser 

- tresh water cooled 

- full galley 
marine head 

OFFERS 

BAYLINER 
HOURSTON 
GLASSCRAFT 
MIRRO CRAFT 

JOHNSON OUTBOARDS 
VOLVO - OMC 

JTERNDRIVES - TRAILERS 

ACCESSORIES 

GIBSON . 

PoWercraft 

CENTRE LTD. 

2520Govt. St. (near Bay* 

382-8291 

FALL 

CLEARANCE 

At 

SIDNEY 

OUTBOARDS 


GANGES AUTO-MARINE LTD. 
' I Steve 112-637-5306 

1 Eagle In stock. )4‘ 
JO HP Merc. Trailer 


Cel 1 ! 

LjwSi* 

laecreft, . 


76 16' CANAVENTURE, 40 H.F. 
E first* 

i»T»l6J Stiff 5.^ __ 

24 SEA RAY SUNDOWNER 331 
hour*. pood condition. many 
-xtro *. SIXMO firm. 66MB62 

mv L/rne ' 

coast trotS, \ __ 

1 12-743-2571 or n$-;4J-S10S. 

16 fa FJ BRO FO R M 'iITrDTOP. 
H"i'. 140 Mercruiaor, trailer, 

ce nvse. Phono 477 -0677._ 

1 2* BRANDLMAYR WITH VOLVO 
in end out. $2,600 or trade for 22' 
G lees with 146 H.F, 363-2 616 

. J7* F.C. CUTTER. TEAK INTERN 
1 or. ideal live aboard — blue water 
| t olling. $66,300. 1 17-7 57-6467 

BARGAIN 

IS’V akl boat end trefler. tieo, 
565-404 


81 


.SAIIJIOATR 


NEW ERICSON 34-T 
ON DISPLAY 

Diesel Aux. wheel eteertng. North 
sail* Lumer winches. Cockp t 
dodger. Deluxe Interior, large e«i 
ley with stove, woven. Hot air 
cebln heat, plus long list of extras 

37* KETCH NIGHTWIND 


COLUMBIA 32 SIjOOP (’761 

by Allen Payne, built tor 
comfort Diesel aux. 

-.jll*. large winches, beaut i 

ful interior., teak and holly cebm 
sole. oven, stove, cabin heater 
Pressure water end ahowtr, exlre 
water tank. Much much more. 
Reduced for feet sale. $424)00. 


ANGLERS ANCHORAGE 
MARINA LTD 
63J MARCHANT ROAU 
BRENTWOOD BAY 
_ 639-3331 

DUNLOP BOOT 

CLEARANCE 
Yellow loceup. Only $11 M 
Site 3-6. Quantity Limited 


SAILTREND 

1157 Newport 

152-2711 


24' SW1FTSURE SLOOP (BY 
owner) 167'So nneker. 137 Genoa. 
130 reefing Genoa end mein. D- 
b *6 JHa Hnee. box and »terh pulpit. 
uede*lai Hearing, oinnecle com 
paet. Fulty mstrumentod wind, pp 
parent end knots, Vlre inboard 
with remotes V.H.F. end cassette 
»!weo system, head*, water tank 
ptc. No roesonebie otter 
r efused. 476-7 600. 596-2665 

WANTED 

Victoria Boat Mart hee J aerioue 
customers looking tor: 

• CeteMne 27 or O-Dey 27 or «mi- 
ler boot - must be very clean. 

2 A test wen equipped 96'-30' 
Rocsr-CruHar, cuetomer hee Co- 
J*.»i ooeeiWe trade 
493 Heed St. 363-3B24 


SAVINGS ON 
REBUILT SRUISER 
MOTORS 

Mercury - OMC - Volvo 


UNIQUE OPPORTUNITY 

Thi* rapidly eporeclebng 47' Die 
sal Motor Yacht is a *- ‘ 

i i nvest me n t. C vt em-bullt_ 

38S8364: fr'S S'KToeSerK In^hJTlm* I TOIA CAMPION, CB, 115 Hp FJ 

I maculate *tete. Listed at $56,400 ysn'houn* -'' wm * rou *-' 10 
‘ - nowr! 


NEW AND USED 
OUTBOARDS 


With trade* con*kk^ed. For "rtf or Sp 
motion and viewing, contact John c ,rr>oer tor 

Allan Win HI. Uirln. 1 U lit* cemwer fqr 


X 

71 


1677 SILVER YAMAHA 756 WITH, 

1 rit h B 'SSr&EFc ^2'’^ ' Ford'fNrWW; 

make mboerd^outboard dnve. s^os.4^. 


Ina 656 1138 
LAPSTRAKE CRUISER. 


i till June of 76. 


i^SxJOQ. 'Will 
4*-ton gr M 


:_i matelv 20' inboard-outboard herd- 

top tx>ei end ^trailer In trade. 


656-4310. 


MUSICAL 
INSTRUMENTS 

' eato'n 7 s~“ 

CASH FOR 
USED PIANOS 
PHONE 382-7141 
LOCAL 280 

MANUAL 


MUSIC TEACHERS 


77 MOTORCYCLES 


FARFISA 6050 2 

organ with revolving 
rhythm box. largo vorl 


IFUtilCI 

419 Burn»ld# C. 


LR. 


76-'76 Teaching 


t^; mint condition. All for onlf tSThLch- P # * M ^ 
i,S 1coTT P.ANO end organ |^GWTAR^ style*. 
Bi gnshsrd at Johmon 3S6-2434 _ -PIANO (Toronto G 

t60i HEINTIMAN, mdoel "*[ . vttory or rxxHJlar) 
upright grand. Gut* In Immaculate 

condition a nod caelng good for age — AOOORDION (Stri 


$W60 or best reasonable 
- \ >4 p.m., only. 


or free style) 
-DRUMS 


RESERVE YOUR SCHOOL BANO 
rental Instrument NOW. Good so- —ORGAN 
lection of oew end used 
cook* end music stand* t 
from HALL Mid FAI . 

MU*!CJ2S POH_36F3107_, _ SAXO p HONE 

RICHARD OENZIL 
PIANO TUNER - TECHNICIAN 
Regulation, repairing, rebuilding. 


immaculate condition, '7| YAMAHA 400 XS. 4,000 MILES, I Cs! h^dfiulk*stSrirS. k tllOtS 'm teS ! W3 ** 

^METRO HONDA.!$1400 Jlrm. 3644)733 or 471^366 : 

lo Juno 1676. $6,450. 


14". Chrome snare SW x 14". 
Zyldllen rock cymbal*. SHngeriend 
ht-hgt. $1^00. mSfU. _ 

KEMBLE PIANO WITH BENCH; j 
excellent condition. S116S. 656-4257. 
eve nings. 

B-FLAT CLARINET — 
Schrfiber. Excellent condition. $65 
or offers. Music stand $7 . 652-5663. . 


*nd amplifier*. 
304-21)1 or 36 


beginner* 656-6317 


Greater Victoria. < 
ford. Experienced, 
teacher 365-9615. 


YORK ALTO 
alto sax.^’NoMet ... 
$225 . 562-7392 after 5 


SAX, FISCHER 


4 to adult, various levels. 


STARTER DRUM SET, 

olus high hat end Zlltfloli 
Firm S17S. 477-4217. 


POPULAR PIANO, ORGAN, 


SILVER PLATED BACH "STRA- 
ctivarlus" Trumpet. Excellent Folk, pop, 
sneoe $425. 364-2370 after 4 p.m. ' 


GUITAR LESSONSI 


,XB£8: 




VANN GIBSON COPY $120 ANO 
cord, elmoet new, “ 

4/6-6252. 


ENROLL 
piano or « 


a mp, $150. 

FENDER STRATOCASTER, CUS- 
tom body, tret*, and .eklng, $400 
with case 363-4105 after 3 R.m. 


HEINTZMAN ANO CO. UPRIGHT 
urand Best offer on 61050 

47/-4461. 


mfjmt 

LEAR 

Very V 

CLASSES 
piano method 


NOW IN 
R MMM I 
8. SKnd 


ARN POPULAR ANO .... 
jno. Fully exoerianogd tear hi 
ary roesonebie rates. 4774)366. 


starting September. 


FENDER STRATOCASTER WITH 'children Jvi^vlMrs 01 ^*^^?** 

iffw.ailg ewa, "°" “*" <*£« 2 hmST re 




VICTOR, CHORD 

condition, $140 firm 


ORGAN, 

477-SMO. 


FLUTJ LAFLEUR B ANO H, 
stedont model, new, $123. WOW. 




71 MUSIC TEACHERS 


LESSONS 
and SERVICE 

MOST INSTRUMENTS 

BERN IE 
PORTER Music 
&°IIL°I«SK?A AYS,0rAU 3Sigl2 

FUN MUSIC CLASSES, FOR 
regiefjrlng tr bT.SST 


CONSE RVATOR> 


PIANO LESSONS F 
ners to Grade 4. 
adults. 476-22tT 


5 m. 


I n ner t welcome. 


PIANO LESSONS, CLASSICAL, 
ftoie jBey Area. Celle Scoff RMT. 


VIOLIN LEMONS BY 
phony musician, Esquimau 
reasonable rate* 3664)664 


framing the beeicf of muelc. Be- 

kss 


ginnert 


CLASSICAL PIANO METHO 
Garden irr " -Km 

nar» an« 
medieta — 

•on 477-6439. 


EXPERIENCED SING 
tesekfr. University area. Phoi 
Mrs. Doreen Thom peon, 477-0615 


M E 


he* Bocheior of Music, 


wr 




MOTOMXVCLES 


atfjrRjK 1 ” tHDu *° 


- n 

HONDA XL250 4 

The bike that’s setting the J 
pace for on-off road enthusi- * 
aLsts. See one, buy one at i 

BROOKLANDS 5 

MOTORCYCLES 1 

937 Fort 383-5926 \ 

PL-1271 

MUET SELL, '74 HONOA 125 XL* i 
excellent dirt bik*. 3,000 mil**, 1 
new Knobies. n*w paint, have 1 
street oeer. Asking $400 or take « 
flr*t reasonable offer. I41| Her- 4 
rhon St. (off Johnson). 

HONOA 7JO K four. On* owner. ? 
only 4A00 Km. Brand now condi- • 
tlon, $2465 76 YAMAHA XS 6*. 1 

gun.asrwfi|i 

MOPEDS- 18 

Models. Teat ride. IMand Metor,' 
385-3515, 402 Esquimalt. O1620A. , . 

POWERTOWN M.C. ' 

Service to all Make*. Hl-Pertor. . 
mance part*. 334-1249. 0199166A. , 
614 Grenville. 

6 

'71 NORTON 750 COMMANDO. « 
semi-chopped. Sportster tank end < 
bars, 4" overfront end, good run- 
n.nq condi»on,mu*t tell Immedl- ; 
atoiy. Offer*, 474-1765. 

i 1975 HARLEY SPORTSER 1000. ,1 

, Ytnr qood condition. Best offer. < 
Will consider trede lor cer or ven , 
364-1903. 

1677 XS483 YAMAHA. 1600 KILO- 
, meter In mint condition, creeh > 
bar. helmet, sieve*, asking stfOO. i 

/ 

73 TRIUMPH 650. 14 MILES ON 1 
rebuilt motor New front end. 
$1,950 or beet offer. 365-1020 after I , 

1 p.m. 

MINI BIKE, 4 CYLINDER, 3>* , 

hiB , 6r»0ln*. good condition $65. 
477-1367, 12 noon - 6 p.m. except 
Saturday. 

1 6 75 KAWASAKI 900. Ex¬ 
cellent condition, custom paint. , 
MJ 2&7 new tire*, best offer. 

rp.wre 

, ^ Y ^5L.«!S; 0 L u « T K. 

eoe, $630 firm. 336^356. 

>9/1 HONDA 400 Tit TWIN, MAO 
wheel*, carrier, beck rest, safety 
bar, under 600 mile*. 3S2-7478 

QxlTRRtTUik 

ass jWk w y r * dto ' 


1677 YAMAHA 500, STREET- •' 
Iren, M)0 mile*. $1,300. 565-0636. ^ 

HODAKJ^MXIOO, HAROLY RUN. j 

1073 YAMAHA 650. $625 OB BE$T 
offer. 3362 Alblne. 366-2113. 

1977 X$ 630 BLUE AMO GOLD, 
immaculate, 656-4606. 

: 

9000 

75 KAWASAKI 600. $1700. 6J2-J763 
*r 632-4255 after 5 pm. 

KW5. JKBr 0 H1 8000 


i MAN'S SMALL BLACK LEATHER 

leckat. almost new, $75. 47M2S2. 

'sZnjTsLxsMBfejar 


j maka me an c 

197I~YAMAHA 750 SPECIAL EDI- 
tlon. warranty, only 4,000 mhos. 
$3,400, asking $7,650. “ 


crarts^Mthin houseboat T775 FWC. 

tinn^ ^ utl, ui turniSure. full size elec- 

J‘.y 1 !.. ° 99 ,nclu ^ d ' trie stove end fridge, 


Phone 1 $11-600. 


CHRIS 


•xceilent condition. 


$650. tractive One of the nicest 

..on 

W6 
Thx, 


SOS I LETT E MOPEU. EX:- |for~ John N'euf eld a't 
condlton. complete with yacht Sate*. 456-SB32 ^ 

$365. 364-4067. Tjl*—-- rurndr trailer, 

| WANTED AT END « F FISHING ,canvas top, IMe jacket*, many 


rl* Crel 
Priced 1 


o^epa*. fireplace. 16 " tv. iaeai,, 0 . lu- , 0 
low boat to live, vacation and entarteln xtLi-llf.a 
. L, on. Mint condition. Raduced from 
$59,000 to $50,000. 656-3596. 

| EXCELLENT CONDITION. 1675 

hunderbird 


4 ft Hp Reg. S 578 Now $ 4<K. 

7.5 Hp. Reg. S 786 Now J 695 
9 8 Hp. Reg. S 952 Now S 849 
20 Hp. Reg. S1142 Now $ 999 
,^ 3 ^ 70 Hp. El. Reg. J2586 

* Now J2299 
Reg $3230 

.... Now an ro*. UJ»T Mb $938 % 

Prices in effect till Aug. 31st, New ~ 20 h p * 
or while on hand stock lastx 

MULLINS 
MARINE 

><j*ai 925 Yans 91. D4XU6SA 


New 1978 — 9.8 e.l. 


reg. $1020 

SAVINGS on all 
motors In showroom 


BRANO NWW 

TANZER 

SAILBOATS ON DISPLAY 
ft BOB WHYTE MARINI 

Corner H arbour end Reeffteve r 

S ACRJFICE 

Now put of the water Hr your 
• nspeckon, 36' sloop oompletaiy 
•quipped for cruising or racing 
Phone 3B4-1474. 452 3626 Must be 


COLUMBIA 36 MARK II. WELL 
•quipoed for cruising, mein jib 
Genoa Splnnexer gear. Bartow 
sheet end Halyard winches. ” * 
Mercury good condition, $14,950. 

cue!*'. T HUNDIRBIRD, ex. 
Skit $816 ce<lent condition. 4 years old. Teax 
interior, slide-out oeiiey. heed 
soundw digital Knot meter, and 
much more $104)00 112-247-6206 

(Silva Bey). 


352-4515 


16’ BRENTW’CXJO 
FISHERMAN 


W-reswt wiileuA RkirVllBA IWir t YU ‘ r r 1 an 11TU lO'Ilf BJ IUV, "If r TTW»l 

.y?.y—*Ms west Coast trailer, txtre*. $4600. 4/7-7416 after 5. 

y*t!Mr/RBrrer*v. aokMB IITTS 40 - v over consider freezer boat.-- - 

>137 after 6 P.m _, Must have A licence, 10 ton or bet 


$750 or best offer. 476-7466. 


127*7" CONNIE. CLEAN, 
r | FWC. 1M hr*., now 


RADIOS—POUNDERS—RADAR 
Hr - Single Sideband - CB 
radio — Flasher depth sounders — 


, A strong seaworthy no nonsense 
’ veebin, ail flbergleae spot; fish- 
|Br ing boat with a 6 h p. dependable 
inboard engine. 3 position steering 
2 rod holders, fish box. $3,650. Wet 
kit (without engine) $2.15C. 


SERVICE to all units — 
Outboards, Sterndnves 

MERCURY 

OUTBOARD STERNDRIVE 
DEALER 

2520 Beacon Ave., Sidney 
656-3221 or 656-1422 


16* 




^tfviwaess.’ 


iNeufeld 


paint hull l.. w 
stove, dinohy. 
rjhn 


Yacht 34- HOURSTON 20 HOURS ON 
rebuilt 316 Chrysler with Valve 270 

2V 73 REINELL COMMAND I 

^control*, 3li Chrysler, , “ni^^ 


HELMETS 636-5632. 

HI after S -- 


. O.B. and trailer 


MARINA LTD 


452-353) 


BAY 


K. J. KAWASAKI 
2640 DOUGLAS 
3654)323 DL-01636A 


sar 


I 4/9 

26' FALCONER SEMI- 
d.solecem«nf Over u 000 spent on 
hull refurbish, leads motor i 0 
finish, would make great boat for , 
winter or tummy fishing. Open toi 


1/8-36* \ 

■— — — -* ■ \ju£ A ■ F 

26’TOLLYCRAFT . Dinghy specialists 

1675 2SS H.P., low hours, loaded . c *rrv the iWf^ sefeoiori In 
with extras -Moorage Til I- fifjj" 

79 Immecufete condition. 679.900. Galleon. Hilda. Hawthorne, Sport- 
304-5374._) vtk end many others. Certopoert. 

SEARAV MB HP, FWC, COM- i ,0 ° ALL BAY MARINA 


M HONOA. EXCELLENT Harbour Rd 656-5591 
muefjST 11456 or best' — - 

Chrysler—Seagull 

OUTBOARDS 

Seise - Pert* — Servlet _ 
KfcN PRASING EQUIPMENT 


Gvosy Yacht Seles. 2776 «ounoer. CB. tabs,, . _ . 

— ““ heeds, prooeng stovg. New trens. I »3* Harbour Rd 

end leg. many new parts. $144)00 
! 3664)545. 476-1066. 


end phone after 4, 364-6760. 


, AUTi. 


Phone before -i 30, 652-3366, 


76 IT175. FEW MONTHS OLD. 


14 ALUMINUM WITH TRAILER 
end 20 horse Merc motor In new- 
: condition. ? tank* Aaat nMb< 

I- — 


656-3167 
(Open 6 day* • 30-3 30 
Closed Mondays) 


as* 


n 


» >P76 NEWPORT CUTTER, 

mejn end Do sails, i Net I nee. bows 
tjrii. 4 berth* heed dinette. 9 * 
Johnson, custom t*ek throughout 

IL-nu imo 606 whvt * Marint - 

ISLAND DRIFTER 

25 MOTOR SAILER 
•t Setuirp Boat Brokerage. Outer 

St* f 364 , 3363* rin * W * Vt ' 523 HM< * 

VICTORIA HONDA 

OUTBOARDS Hr tne SSMor 
Try hp-gnd 6.6 he in stock 

- ?f SF>Pougle e_336-6364 

| «* WOOOEN CUTT 
r Carvel planking. 

xtre. 7 


. _ t TTER. RED 

- planking. Includes 3 

sails, stove anchors. 7 nkssoo. er 
°V!SS* rd ' , moofa 2* •'•o available. 
13.600 or offers. *34)336. 


7T P G TAIPAll CRUISING 
Hoop, excellent condition, Volvo 
»»pvg, t 6lnk. head. CB. etc. 


ONDISPLAY 
COLUMBIA 8.9 (27* ) 

h p. diesel, Lewmar 7-ioeed umHnLSL ,10f3 ‘ m ' 1M0 * f,<r *' 

winchee, North sells, bow end I zr**f****? v ^__ 

itsrn pulpits with double lifelines, MINTO SAILING DINGHY Ex 

•ffiSSSS’ Si. 

cfiir ft oSStL t u' tL. ’tonk^ woodwork, bronze hardware. 

&otjrZBh» cnJiMr thrt S Offert sW^JwTios °* "”fL 
ally sell* tni* could be the boet u ^ 5W4,ai - 

you have been Iqpking for^ Sells- DORY KETCH 7T 


- /instate 

MARINE INSlTRANCE 

Excellent Rates. Low deductibles. 

HENPER SON R EALTY 3651 2 4 : 


20‘ VIVACITY SLOOP. . | 

electric Merc., electric Aber lights, 
water, home Soar., 4 sells, full 
cruising. Inventory end condition, 

North Venr- -- ‘ 

I17-960-02M 


MARINE M W T, af LISTING 

BUYING OR SELLING A BOAT 
CALL 653-4636 
OR 66 6-3566 

1674 WINNER FIBREGLASS 
SjG .NEW;Mercrulser 


COLl’MBIA 7 6(25') 


is.“ s5 'r «* 


w,m *wii tr ~~ m. SSS^SB 1 SMfe Jl *- 

(4v, marine - 

Whyte 6- 


Eve* 652-4366 


Vancouver, phone et once, 


74 BULTACO SHERPA 330 OOOD 
condition, light kit, 6900 . 656-5636. 


1977 GS 330 SUZUKI. 


FOR FUR 
: 4764)552. 


Ski. 130 Merc. 

* In Indiana, 3 i 


MG COUN' 

x. Tlvv i 


7R 


BinaKs 


BUY, SELL. TRADE, REPAIRS 
New end used bikeks. Qualified me-' 
cnanlc. operating own business 
Lowest prices (Expert bucked 
wheel>. Open 8 e.m.4 p.m., Sun-. 
12-5 p.m. Reno Bikes. 2519 Gov't., 
364-3514. Dealers. CCM — Raleigh 
- BJR.C. - Shields - Nishikl. 
Seme day service. 


Ej&F Andy:!M T ~ IM ~ Kij,MOM .| MjrUKj TOO. 


' miles, must sell 5604514. 


SALE. 1 TEN- 
end AAustang bike. 


TWO YEAR OLt 
Tour da France. 74' 

' 476-6564 


craft. 

ski i 

oraet, _ 

47' TROLLER. ‘3 YEAR B lT- 
cence, Rjfy equipped new elec 
trlcel. hydraulics, Wegner steering, 
deck, etc.. 475 Chrysler diesel. 
»s?,i oo or be et offer, H7 *53-427; 

USEO OUTBOARDS 
Great selection from 
2 h.p. to 100 h.p. 

GIBSON POWERCRAFT 
3624761 


hvdreuMc foam' end 
$77,000 . 746-0265 before 


Mererul. .. 

trailer. Good condition. 
$5,300. 452-5604. 


20 HORSE POWE R EVINlfuDE. 

gj !3S& 9ena:% 

6 P.m. 3 6 4420 1. 


T1U 


m NEEDS LEO. 
- Bearcat 55 horse 
♦-cycle, $400 or best offer. 


_ 7W HORSE POWER M5RCURY 

frame, offers outboard motor, 3 years eld, herd 

11L otw ' ca " 

65fl 5025 after 5 p.m. 


speedT 

476-46! 


3 SPEEO, $50 GIRL'S Si . ... 

M5. «»« Fi »» ns. |Y wn 55« m 2?„: 
- cables, marine 

TRIUMPH TWENTY - 

‘ wheels, excellent 


3-SPEED TR 


4774216. 


BOYS 3 SPEED CCmTST/ 
size, excellent condition, 
kickstand. 4774764. 


ANDARD 

Includes 


' ID, 

at 


MUSTANG TYPE, GIRL’S, Ex¬ 
cellent condition, extras, $45. Re¬ 
placement price ever $65. 652-2136. 


-• * gjMg^^^Debie for 


transporting. $61. i 


RALEIGH 10 SPEED. 6123. AAO- 
toCToaa. Both excgllont condl- 


W N Iw? SSr 






N ' S 104PEED, $30. 




3SPEC0 WITH 
bars. SIS. 477-2241. 


*' T * N ,Voo K, jr53e ,IK * 


KM.f. CMRYSCER LI 




S»a .r^T',,.,3 


24' FIBREFORM BAJA COM- 

r u s'», L .»*5an' rt " 


WANTED: 12-14' 


ALUMINUM, 

rggsonabla. 


14' 

oar_ 

naaraef offer. 




35 HP EVINRUDE, ELECT RI 

xxzzzzttf&xkr'' 


mini, divine. Moorage! Every 
tncelvebie extra. SuTtOO. 4764164. 


TROLLER B. LICENCE 2 
» remaining, 7 tons, radar, 
', loran, V.H.F., C.B., 


& 


oHer two double berths, end . 

^ oeeutlfuliy laid out interior. Yen- 
656 3611 mar diesel, bow end stern pulpit* 
double lifelines end boarding 
gates. Lewmer winches. Retsey- 
Laomorn sells, teak ceWn sole, 
and much more. As with the 6.3, 
her standard equipment list le ex¬ 
end the price has been 
from $26,365 to #n attrac- 
1. " you ere looking tor 

_ _ wail finished boat that 

you can afford, this Is It. 


laawjsr 


» hasd, $; 

4 6 Si 


'I* 


CAL 20. EXCELLENT MULL AND 
sail*. 1671 4 h.o., Johnson, fully 

$*si«. , 7r73 r#c,n# r d cru - ,rv5 ' 


BRITISH 

EXCLUSIVE 

c f 


LISTINGS NEEDED 

1.6. wtth E-Z load Wa hevs more buyers then boats 2270 Hsrtjour" 

“ * iklno Can sell your good used boat lover I_ 

25') guickiy, commercial or plea¬ 
sure. Squire fRoat Brokerage. 


_;ALER FOR 

COLUMBIA YACHT6 

L - M.. 


- -— >4. Johnson Inboard. 

110^*4774671*°°' cond ‘ 

D* ^ACESHIF, BXCBLLPN t 

| condition. _ 3 sells. 


_ afttSw^Ste."* 

Sidney 456-3561 ALACRITY - 16* FIBREGLASS 


16* GLEN-L, WITH 50 H.P. JOHN- 
son outboard, tut trailer, end twin 
tanks, seats 5 or * with new full 
canvas top. Asking |J300. 456-7226. 

FOR SALE SMALL sTift TUG 
with 471 GM Diesel. Suitable for 
boom or selvage boat. $3,500. 
566-4655. 


35 HORSE- 
E Z loader 
top. $1,500. 


141V ISLANDER, 
power Evinrude. 
trailer, full cimp 
677-1743 evenings. _ _ 

1675 14*4" DOUBLE EAGLE, 17 m 
H.P. More, electric, tilt boom 
trailer, many extras. Wall cared 
— Offers. 633-3644. 


GLASS PLYWOOD, 


NEW r HYDROPLANE, WOOD 
and fiberglass construction. $150 
Phone 365-4266 after 3:30. 


COLO MOLDED TRIMARAN, 
utter-catch, sleep line*, ocean 

$36 000 ,UllV 


25' BAYLINER 
Express. Immaculate 
mgny tktrgs. 63 2-4317. 

WANTfO; 17 
bergias* beet, 

476-4819. 




MOORAGE TO MARCH Jl. 1676, 

off?r tW S$ mo*"*' ,30 ° or bMl 


Vb. 


FIBERGLASS. FACTORY 
.... asking 6225. or offers. 
476-7606. 


10'/?' 


IT ALUMINUM HARBOURCRAFT 
hjr^Jop boat with ears, 6“ 


6'' CUSTOM CRAFT, 1 YEARS 
I. Consider 16' beat and-gr r* 
eel trailer In trade. UjTeJI. 


MUST SILL, 22* SAILBOAT, 
under reoelr. 6466 or bail after 

362-0506. 


Ln 


30-H.P. 

It. __ - Package. $1265. 

1 7 Runabout. 1«63 75-h.p. 

Evinrude, $660. 16 Cllrker. 1670 
40-h.p. Evinrude. $1465. 1060 Gold- 
stream Ave. 


16' CALOLASS. 65 
Roedrunner trailer, 
bracket, good 
Offers, 477-6247 


HR MERC. 


BARNACLE 



3T 9HAFPIE. CHAPPEL DE- 
sinned ketch. New In Victoria 
$6500 pr bast offer 360-6201 

CROWN 2J. EXCELLENT CONDI- 
tjon. Maqy consider 


YACHT CHARTERS 
LTD. 

Power or Sail, skippered er U- 

drlve. 34-116'. 362-6633. »' NORCRAFT. sleeo* 4, eounder. 

-r. ——- - - • ■ ■- i dinghy, Butene stove, very com- 

& * r '‘ M t " • ,i " 

l 5°JP 0u, ' d ,ral1 ^ (## r ^ w) »' ZOLANDA. Meson fiberglass 

477-4662. Ketch, a rears old. die**) aux. 


CUSTOMIZED SPEE 
h.p. Evinrude. plus C_, 
d tank New oelnt, uphol 
tit be teen. Offers. 364-e30i 

BOAT, 1300 LB. TILT TRAIL 
. no motor. $300 •' pl ' ‘ ‘ 

ads work, 125. 4/9-3476 


Mtk I 


36' ZOLANDA. 

Ketch. 2 veers old. 
Lerge tankage. Skippy 
stavolt sellinq dlngf 
beautiful imp at 


JP HeLIOUSA. 
sailer world aulser. 

— * -Mlg i 


Plfar Mt 

-- ----r- . Gardner dto- 

A fine versetii# ship $66,000 


525 Head St. 


884-3363 


to MORSE POWER MERCURY 
mot o r M long shaft ilka new. 1700 

13** LASER. ORANGE, 2 MILS, * 
St M0 firm. 477-2T 


K^rsa.* 


deyeeiler in trade. : 

CORONADO 23, VERY OOOD 
condition, sleeps 4. 6* outboard, 
•port Yak dinghy 4*7-4004. 


^ *'™ 


o^, N . 


MERCU- 

ly peck- 


VIKING 26. 8 SAILS. 6.8 V 
ry outboard, dlnghv. seteti 
•Be, much more. 42B-MB3 ._ 

MUST SELL-10' FIXED KBFL 
sailboat wtth outboard. SI090. 


14' SANOSTERCRAFT, 33 H P. 

electric start, trailer, nearly new 
tee; $1700 or Offers. 36S1I74 


WANTEC 
board rrv 
479-4602 


YANTED: 1670 EVINRUDE OUT- 


BJpYfHORE 


KAYAK, 363. 


CU8TOI 

to Merc 


2 7103_ 

»‘Xsr T - 


OUTBOARD 
MOTOR SALE 

New and U*pd 
4 HP to 70 HP 

USED ZODIAC 
SPECIAL 

OAK BAY MARINE I 

Sale* and Service ^° a * r 
1327 Beekoh Dr. RUM 


tS HPORTING (iOOOA 

WHrni 3*14713 


Next Basic 
SCUBA DIVING COURSES 
Begin Aug. 22 and Sept, r 
Isn't It time 
For • new adventure 



_lALL 

Factory tg you-__ 

10 PER CENt OFF ALL CUES 
JULY ANO AUOUST 


srj&ur- 


4 


-« 















































































































































































































































































































































































































V 


> 


r>All.\ t\M/>NlST. Vi 


b? *romT%n (KNHR 




OPENING SPECIAL 

Rem. 700 BO. L. STD Cels 
BuNtnell 4x KOM. Read* to 

*,o. only 5375 RIFLES — 
°ark-H*it 7MM 4x 5349 - Win. 
225 4x 5349 Savage 300 4x 
5729 - Win. 306 Erby 

■ nag Fre 64 $396 • Husovarra 
30f «-»*• 84*9 - Win 36-30 SI 34 
BrOAOin* 243 Lever S279 - 

Ran- 301 auto S324 - SHOT 
GUNS — Browning 12G auto 2 
Bar uogaq* ca*a 5650 Ran 
UG auto Sl>9 Rangar 12G o-u 
M99 - Win 12G 97 tump Sift 
Win Mod 1? Rib-Choke I2G 
5299 M R I2G S.S. 542 

SHOP and COMPARE 

PRLE 1 YEAR LAY AWAY PLAN 

1307 BROAD - 


»* RAVfirv sTovm 
.ltd PI kv\« t s 

Sit SlSSS* 9 '***** HEATER 

SOAL “ and WOOD STOVE 
Floor 'urnace SH' otter 4/»-6»37 

»7 FURNITURE 

MAnRESSES 


tv. ftrKREO RAIHO Ml 
RALES *nd SKRYllE , 


(WOTERII*. MEAT 
tuirf PKOIH (* 


INVEST IN THE BEST 

INVEST IN REST 


Open 'til 9 nightly 

385-5555 

Hi-Fi Equipment 

—Buy the boat and reduce costly 

service calls! 

Ya». *e taka tradaa! 

No down'payment! 

• Frea Dativaryi 

F*e# Parklnt - 


umiinmt 

oualitv attti <M»aat ti 


W-M Lama Sides 81 99 16. 

lea Per Lo. increases 

CUT. WRAPPED. FROZEN 
D-»t .to Trwn Etc 


MIM I I.I.AM.Ol JS 
FOR SALE 

mvORCt SALE~-*TEAK' TABI F 
and chain, portable voover v/esn- 
•• delu<ft quean vie v.at*»t>e<i 
turntable records, Swedish cordu 
, roy. raclinpr and stoo 1 Cowichen 
Indian noneno. ladies ano child** 
skates. »C-channel CB redo. tenor 
‘ vanrhona, rifle-,. oius mise. iM7 
Cnestnut St*. A a.m. to 3 a.m Sat 
i urday only. 

EVERYTHIN MUST GDI 


CYCxTimn muii ggi I aroe ■ 

Mov.ng saia. starts Sunday tor ona L j f n 

m* wr^^srsa 5»M 

»W7Lt?' 


MI*C U I.AM.III R 

I'oR BALK 


383 677? 

fUaUrian 

OVERSTOCKED 


MIM'MjANEOni 
I 'OR SALT 


>n?M KM.AM-.01 A 
FOR HALE 


rfypfcnU** X Util >> 

MlftCEU-lNKrtni 

EX)R ram: 


BARGAIN 

ANNEX 


- *arr»a«—Bank F.nancingl OKANAGAN MCINTOSH APPLES, room sats. tires auto Parts some 

4ic a pound Pears, prunes, ai 2tc 1 clothes. 1004 Ruaaall (Ceeigflower 

PP 1 ULLSERyiCs WARRANTY) « pound. Pre-iton# patches 39c a and Skinner.) Look tor signs, 

r unbar —5 vea<» parts and I incur on most uo^nd Cr.sn 8 C. calary 2K e *3-935. 

* new found equipment. pouno. DUl coca, 39c a pound. 

—Loanar supplied during service Okanagan Nc 1 ft'd tomatoes 39c 
•dirtg 1st yr « naund. B.C. Hothoj$e ~ 
small tomatoes 25c a Powm 
da No. 1 caullfolwer. arg. 

69c Bach Frajh nushrooms 8*c a 
:>uUnd. 4/R44I4. 


—Full credit on upgrading 1st yr 


TECHNICS 
Package Deal 


FREEZER BEEF SALE 



Goodrich foam 

matires&aa guaranteed tor .u 
years Latex toani rubber auto¬ 
matically aaius's to venation* >n 
•veiqhl giving even soppcrl the toll 
length ot the spine They a r * com- 
•ortable. oooi. hygemt end are 
made »n a tire retardant nck.ng 
AY Pi AN •» J" Hid - 4*4" 5ltf - Quean. 

ooc s229 — King. 52V9 Box springs >c r <># receiver S-87, the turntable 

386-3429 ^ 4 tch Poiytoem maltreat twpper SL-t* (Mml-euto bait drive) with Choice side of Grade A, baby beat 

ueds single ia 55. double SIlYy magnetic cartridge, the speakers or regular SI 35 a pound. Hind 

Quean SlA King 517.75. Angle iron SB-24C. FULL PRICE S599. Low quarters. Grade A, Sl.if a pound, 
ueo frames with rug roilara 5u4. monthly payments. Price 

IMMEDIATE OEUtVE HY_ 

Harmon, Kardon 
Citation 

Dp o Specials 

Receivers - Amps Turntables 

Tuners - Pre Amos 
Clearance Price* 


pouno. 

*s 39c r MT 

Sa-® 


active furniture 

|M DAVID IB2-B274 


sreetkm b* specimen Mar s 
: your Interior decor From 
_ l.ght Dracaenas to Sun lovi* -j 
standard Hibiscus plan's MuM 
sold. Ig. r Rubber tree Wai St' 

Now S9Q. Consultant servire a/ai>- 
aula. Lower Commerce Mat' ex! 
lo View Parked*- 

VtKIN-3 AUT*3MATIC WAiHER, 

Harvest Gold, as new t. - - 
older style walnut vanity d'tssar MetaJ dwk 

- ixa che 

tad 


L*.ver Main Fhw of 
STANDARD FURNITURE 


GOOD USED 


3 pc hrrm/plone suite 


Uf.Wr - -. 

.nnTnCTws' 2 I* che*teHied unite 

,#d ^ #nd Ch0lr ,,7S New unpainter! chlUa 


GREGG FURNITURE 

23UU Douglas__ J*«-73as 


OPEN SAT., SUN. ANOJdV 
tas, ail the noirday waakano. 10 
.Ini • p.m. Why ouv pra>*»x)a»u 
and sawdust whan you can mvasi 

■ * —--- Peie s 


Price . 
wrapped, froran. 
382-3012 or 35345 
Distributor*. 
CLEARANCE O 
honey, 30 lbs. 


Dvnoco Dynakit 


HUNTING SPECIALS! p laS^ T^s^'^avery^y' 

Savings on Ramlngtons. Win- Victorian Linen gras* IffS. 
chastars, Rogers. Ail callbras. 12 trom ffKfc. apiece miaid 

ga Shotgun snails. 6*7^, $3.96 nia^tuaany V 

box. Savings on 243, ,3M. 3-30.- T *“ “ 

an mo at lass than wholesale- 

DiqeSt 7 oolv Biff* 4 1974 Shotgun otner miv p ^TP3 P 00^2 Vp C 

B b'a only *1 *9 Now in Brenncke. c.wna gtc. Charge*,, Mastgryyoe t j A npaoxJW P.C 

» r r.- * 5,5S * * ■ StS ? i'"Z !°»rt W *Vc. 

Normaammo backjn_s1ock__^ 4 e-auw. , ST<10 P Amp ?00x2 W.P.C. 


_ .30 tor bucket. New crop honey 
520.70 Plus 51.30. Babas Honey 
Farm 655-5319 dally including holi¬ 
days until 5. 


UPRIGHT 
FREEZERS 

. ! 12 Co. 5349.65, ACT IV 

olo crop 'URE Distributor^ 

45c, $19.50 plus St Je2-8274. 


Increases cut, 
it to trim, etc. 
Alberta M*at 


QF^Iro 3 s(S 


IVE FUfcM 
566 Dav d 


3II5M4 

Open nigh 
Sat. *611 


718 PVUayson 


’'ij tobft* "trom' 596.3-piace inlaid Mo ^*! 

IxTVS. $3.fa manugany hedrujm suite, 53x9.95; Ac a um’p M Al • vu p r 

Si**-*? dr&iFzf&A 5o°int flsaassi 

Bk?Su%. !*o^ with 4 'cn-irs. 535s. victoi a- |CAKO . Amp 40x2 W P C. 


ITARAGE SALE. SATURDAY ANO 

v.noey, 1-4 ir.m. 13*6 fibre;las-, 
boat and trailer, exercise bike, 
toaster oven, dog clipqgrs, an- 

PICKED OR SHOOK, BEZZOLA’Sl 01 er .terns. 101/ Wtstoort P ace 
burs vour ripe aooles end nears I ’m onto Vaxme Lane, oft Cor 
pHr e fo- 5-7C lb delivered. We press for dova Bar Road). 

S2B7 half or exchange one gallon of *^~ r 

5476 ib'ct for 35 lbs ot fruit call (112) 

$147 713-5393 for appointment. •_ _ I 


WE HAVE THE EDGE! 

571 Yates St. 383-2422 


RIMP4C DIVERS Ltd 


T nefe Units Assembled at 
.Slightly Higher Prices 

CAR STEREOS 
Panasonic-Jensen 
Ptoneer 

Clearance Prices on Pioneer 
Car stereos and Speakers 
Pane C-710Q auto. rev. cass 5169 
Pana Cx51CC cassette 5119 

Limited Quantities 
First Come - First Served 

room suite, round table with 6 _ . 

o? n a Panasonic Color TV 

aea' 1 wo only 6 piece Jacocean FULL SERVICE WARRANTY 
twist dining suites. 5495. Financing Years_ Plx Tube 

rr*i 1 prmps ITEV 1*90 VlN- avaLacle OAC, mas ter charge and 


PICK YOUR OWN CORN 

Canada no. i gt jauty 

$5;^ Phone 652-1620. No Sunday busi 

5476 __ _•_ 

Vf76 SILVER RILL FA#IVIS 


EAT THE HIGH COST 
Of Wine and Beer 
Make Your Own 
INSTRUCTIONS 
EQUIPMENT _ SUPPLIES 
I HAMILTON HOPS AND GRAPES 
464 A Burnside Rd. E. 348-4511 


EXTON’S 

WAREHOUSE 

STORE 

749 View St. 


rocklntr rhair 
Cornw table 
Pictures from 
S#*alv hideahnd 
CiMwhed velvet chair 
inH »t<>ol 

IVmhle rtrestier and mir¬ 
ror. 2 nitelahles. 4 
drawer chest, walnut 


PS 


PRIVATE SALE. ALL UNITS EX 
(.•dent condition Cr.eslertieid aid 
chair, $325. Kroehler chesi-a-ced 
SjOO. manooanv drooteat »au'e 
with 4 matching upholstered 
Next scuba divigg course starts cn*)rs, 5155; mahogany desk cna>r. 
sept 4 Also next advanced scuba 535; 2 wall units, walnut. 3 shelves 
diving course siarls Sept 9 Learn on doors, 5135 eacn l-«v Bo. 
to dive in a course taught by "The reciiner, gold. 5159; student s desk 
P-mfetsionals". Rimpac Divers, S40. 2 taole lamps, green base 
9618 5 St., Sidney or phone gold shades. $45 Piir;~20 ot carpet 

*16-631?. __ runner, 27", $25. Bargain pricas. 

* HUNTERS! 356 i 6 -; _ 

7na best Bush Bike tor your needs - p , c 7 c aalNUT DINING 
--.Honda CT90 Trail - 8-speed ro ^ d LN ,^„ wdh 4 

r,nS VICTORIA HONDA 
2461 Douglas 346 8364 

DL 01957A 


9 X 12 MUSHROOM CARPET 
with rubber underlay, excellent 

Pick your own freeier, corn this condition. Orange eleclric kettle. ^ ir . 

weekend el 1590 Hovey Rd up 20 * 20 antique footstool, natural 2105 DOUGLAS ST.. 366-1J77. ONE 

Tomlinson Rd off Stallvs Cross swivel otfict chair with casters, s jOP SHOPPING FOR ALL 

Road .60c per doien 452 2019 steel tile on rasters 592-677S. PLASTIC PRODUCTS, industrial 

AUUFLwAFR f-OR FREEZING, i MOMFl ITF 

.. \UCUUM CLEANERS 

ui Lt _ PARTS _SERVICE Over 200 recondlhonad and 

SA GliSON POWERCRAFT 'ludranteeci from j«. Current 
7520 Government H^v^etc' 

GARAGE SALE, LARGE SELEC- 

.. U »r^oul^tt S rT°.T Head St 

and b 3i0 Goidsiream New Com- 


ladga heads, choice oualitv 4411 
i Cordova Bay Rd. Opqn Saturdays 

' 6 30-5^ p m 

SUNHILL ORCHARDS 
APPLES 

5963 Old West Saanich Rd. 
652-4116 - 


"THE PLASTIC SHOP" 


FREE pELIVERY 

Come In * Browse Around 

Trade-Ins Accepted 

73J YATES 

CREDIT TERMS 
AVAIIw\BLE 


FROM ENGLAND! N an SA ri>e holiday weakand °^0 

VERY LARGE SHIPMENT VWSit SntSSl 

OF <;CX)I) QUALITY OAK o n oood wood Grn.mmg at P;t e • 
1 . x r . „ v t Place The store tor evaryeocv 

AND AN! LQl E I'TRNI- I Victorian Linen press 5395; war 1 

Tl'HK rnmivfin.r nf- T* ninv ,ron 1 ^66.9$, 3-pi.ce InlRUS 

m nr., convisnntj 01 1 ninK mah09any bedroom suite/ *3999 

room kuitex. hedrewm tumi- draw Teat taoies plus * chairs, for 
. , . . . onfy 5299.95. one only monastery 

tun\ desks and bureau, ox--,tacit with 6 chairs. 5395 : victur.a' 

i‘aii<>n»! Lnkviec an*! xet* i»f tram* prints, trom $14 95 oius 
casiona lames and eris or m#ny miscaltanaous item* 

chairs, large mirrored side- china etc Chargtx. Mastercnarq* 
jboards, grandfather chtrta.ifgS# p,#c * 7M 
vases, brassware. and silver console stereo! COMPO 
.items, and many other in-; nEnt stereo, colour 7V - 

. . white TV vacuum, single bed 

$49 leresunK items. t>ood selec - double bo* spring, cnestarfield and 
cju tion fit LYaniierrv cnair Occa'ionai tnair. cn*st of 

MM non mi vran ei r> drwtrv electron,c organ. 4-15 

$09 Doulton anti Victorian je- “ 

$ 15 § wellery. 

] All i^fxxls are tor sale prior 
to our next auction. 

SIDNEY AUCTION SALES 
$!.'»! 978:; 3 rd St.. Sidney 

524ai 656-6611 

i Shoj) Hours—Mon. to Sat. 10 
a.m .-6 p.nt. 

OPEN AIJ. DAY 
SUNDAY 9 A M -9 P M. 

*'•« Urn- ,-oxt pick up and <*U-! ^OXT*. l fjrPgmw 
very service. — rm- * ■iff®' 


5M radial tires, 14"” 
tires 3S8 6297. 

ONE ACRCBATIC MAT. 4X10 
laminated rubber. 5100; one aero 
tatlc safety fc*'t. new 525. Two 
6 / 6 - /terrors, 5100 each. Three 
Ford van sftats. two three-sealers 
one four seater. 5100 apieca On* 
S-pi»ce drum set (Raven) 5100 
442 4551 

VIxQfeLLANEOUS HOUSEHOLD 
goods - dish racks, sewing boxes 
circles, i-assette recorder, lined 
*tra.» tloraqe cabinet, some si!- 
xerware, many items, soma ciotn 
mg Juft ask. 385-4734. 


FREESTONE PEACHES 


474 1011 396-3717. 

WHITE # TV. AND 


3 Years Parts Labour 
Loan Durlno Repairs No Charge 
H>" Panasonic Color 5569 plus tax 
No down payment, 522 monthly I 


Aeafnerby 300 Maqnum wlth-leo^ 

oold 3x9 Scope, otters. 592 7392 ELEG ANr 9-PIECE BURLED )' . n ^ „ Mien 

afte r S. __ Mahogany .dining room suite. Ind6p0na6nt DUy 6 fS Road 

S. E .Yv' N MrrI! u£S5ii S’ ”«»• ° n s*1iae tbSnT DlSCOUHt Service Ltd. SAANICH ORCHARDS 

888 *“ VL&* •.-asga* tf »!!-••« <™«> 

UPer Marlin mod^ 1894 44 mag 
r.jm 5U5. Both guns ng^ condi 
lion. 59F-1709 


tapestrv China cacmct and side rknr ._ , _ , apples — picked 18c lb. 

toard. AJJ in excellent condition. y39C ESQUimalt Rd.< p l ck ,4C ,c 652 - 2009 
BOX 24. • rin.. 1 ft t . r . _ /-luumft Tftutl 


Hon of old mechanics too's. house 
hold miscellaneous. ia**t edger 

ni.«.».'rT« 7 K*nd qardan tools, nic nacs. chests * 

nr D «nd rOtiOUe goodies? 1765 ROSS S».. m#rC * Md ' 

Saturday 10 4 . Sunday 12-5 BLACK ANl 

-- -iu.itT Mike prvniu rno Mr,or ‘lard 550, Zenitn super automatic 

SILVER RILL FARMS po-iiP/uauT P< ni^ F S>»FsfnT ‘-ening mach h# 560. J-piece drop 

7179 Central Saanich Road. £0 J lPMTNT ALL PRESENi (<?af k)tfr .. n $ et $2C chesterfield 

652-3509 Our No 1 eatmg and ILv-PAckxiAlifF OFFFRRF and ,r9 ' r ^ B ' e V* 7 

freazing corn is now available lyiai- A crJor LE r rsiirpwiFfy t ta'.ies *4*. covered carteque 

NEW COlt POTATOES. « PER ^ •* «*• »•*»*» 

sac. teed potatoes, $30 per ton 

Michell Farm 3015 Island View GARAGE SALE-J143 GRANITE 

Saturday. Sunday Monda> Seu- paCTORY CLEARANCE SALE VHHMpm 
lemoer 2, 3. 4 . 9 a-m to 5 p m. Aug. 22 rd-Sept. 8 th. Jackets. T- vilrinu (vhIl'P 

Garden tools, carpenter s tools shirts s*eat snirts, miscellaneous ' ,,n 'x«r 

lady's cinthes furniture, curtains, items. all must *' " ' 

ou books. Miscellaneous items 51.S9-S16.99 West Ci 



wilh rotisserie 525. various tars 
and wine octties 51 a doien 

r-3481 


GOOD USED 


Victoria Press. Box 

ICHN WIT ‘'tF* usl - D OML V IB DAYS 


Aq^acox waterced, natural 


385-5555 

5 YEAR 
WARRANTY 


1978 20" 


MENS FARMER 

* ’ h iktno^boots* 5 HJoh°SlerrA "iue tram^Tfilides li^.'SS Aquabcx. 

U 3 worn tw*ce 580 first S75U taxes Must be picked ue 

^ *i ° 9 new worn by S om. Saturday. 478-6035 Pur- 

3 _'-chaser must bring certified cteoue 

BROWNIE 5 SHOT AUTOMATIC or 3 pieces ot identitkatlort. 

4 20 jowS t t^nel| 0 5»0*’JOoTlo^lng DOUBLE BED AND 4 DRAWER 
die?* e tor bU p»c* <c 5 over 500. good dresser. as mw. excelions 
,, , r 7 x jSsNpki I’attress, white French Provincia 1 

e cCT S22S. White single dresser with 

GOLF CLUBS. MENS SET, mirr0f , $.,5 old desk. 815. Small 

Spalding matched metal des*. S»5. 477 2241. 

eat ier bag and iart. 5125 A so - - .. . 

i?*vTseL with bag and cart. 550. small kitchen table 2 
183-1319 avenlnga. chairs, carpets itndiam walnut 

-_ . s e» tabia, telephone gossip bench. 

PARASAIL, 300-FOOT TOW LINE ; fn fsf$ of drawers TV set and 

and harness seen at Oak B «v Tea , drap ei, terns. 

Party last 4 vagr* 5450, 592 9188 598-4293. r 

---—r-- 1TC WANTEO TO BUY FRENCH 

FENWICK HMG ARH 111 ; Provincial dining room suite, larae 

f vrod 8 '?' N°. I Hne. 51?^ Win- 0 , >v(1 | t ra ^e c lesterfieid and 

ches’qr model 12 pump shot gun. ch#<r ovtr M 0 ld for part 

Si/u 471-99 08. _ ■ • _ payment of same. 5v2-4i39 

COMPLETE .FARMER JOHN aEAUTlFOL NEW 9-PlECE OAK NOT? 7 ''Rent*” ^Xn^Ca" able *or 

.-.-t suH. excallent condlllon, 8200, Jin j n; , room soda, by BeThardt. a nv we any make 

597-9IM after 6 81,100; all new bedroom suite tri * y 

r -,0 cai c 1 inirt fncT-iii -/i* dres-er. headboard. ? night 

S ^ L , E w l i{ 0 '|i*jj. c 'iSKJ? ••■>!». MrloRKiao « 6 .*W 

5X*tl. -^ AEBynj|S> TABLE, 5175; 

c c T E o u~wmitp PI YFB >,xe. Desert band redroom sude 
WE t S 7k, E ™ oSi nffrs Lee 2 p« chesterf.a'd 

'’O® 0,f * rs - Le * ;te 11*' Vet's Bargains 3 i 

speed 303. tX. 479 - 3479 ._ Quadra. 314-3152. Chargsx aval 

WANTED SET Of WEIGHT 


CANNING TOMATOES 25C A 
pound 4253 Grange Rd. (Off 

Carey ). _ * _ * 

FRESH SOCKEYE SALMON, 52.25 


Hrxivpr upright vacuum 

Viking lrkige 

- $278 

Moffal H>'' ran^e 

5128 

Simplicity 2-siK?ed 

washer 

y88 


Bargains Tools. turniture »’ j ‘.DRFOLK HOUSE UNIFORM. Moffat built-in oven $96 

fridges, cur^js, giasswear. pictures. Brownie uniform, girls' bicye’e. ' . 

stereos, cameras and itweiierv. ^rown Derty imary, decanters. Hoover wasnci Spin UI>ei 


S150. Older Argus slide crojeeior 
cartridges and screen, 850 

NEW ond USED _ — 

T*0 WROUTSHT IRON CHANOf 
*SS£. *, ,'.1, ll„S. M CT.HM, MINI ITN, 

XV JST «!«“ rd | *>'N >1* c.ndtN »-MI ol»T.’ 

5215. drop arm loveseat 515$ oc- 555-3337 _ 

cawonal chair 514 95 to 589, com- GA raGE SALE. 1731 ALBERT 
clete bedroom suites 5279 to 5f99; A ve fridge, stove, clothing, can- 
single beds 559 to 8U9 chest of ^,5 bicycle parts, plumbing e ec 
drawers 549 to 5169. dressers 599 tricat oamt. Everything must go 
to 5149. bedside tables 5 f 9 lo S!v. or sen t to the garpaqe 

Duncan Phyfe drop leaf tatie and - 

6 chairs 5559* round rock maple ; F.<PERIFNC 6 D DISHWASHER, 
pedestal table and 4 chairs SS4V; afternoons and midmqr.t sh it 
5-pc kltcnan sets 579 to 599 7 pc Apoty in person Scott’s Restau 

set 5149; 3-pc sets 844.95; kitchen rant 65u Yates, after 12 noon 
'step stools 824.95; china cabinets 362-1289 
595 to 5259. buffets 559 to 8179; PH| . CQ RANGE 81C0 

noovar washer ^h -dryerSSV Jo Momco rw , >,o* awn mower *5 
S Y.* Cuum c l W i 9 i el° ed:, * r ,,s vacuum cleaner Ken 

849.95; firescrHtns 817.95ID >44 95 , 0ft p owtrm0 | # jea ter tar- 

firegrates 512.95 usa your Char- x«78 6337 

oex of Masler Charge. '/ — 

GARAGE SALE CUTTIV . 

PANDORAxFUPNITURE LTD i-.rch complete 590 Cham t'oer 
1050 Pandora Ave. 383-6219 :«50 Grinder 5/5 Bench vice 515 

Also usee car oar’s • e- 

59s 3026._ 

.OFFICE TYPEWRITER BOY 5 
J CCAA 3-speed Men s 5-soeel 
Lady's 3-speed ’j-« 4 ed violin 
Power po.e Guide un:form. Soccer 
■ shoes 656 - 3844 . . 

! M F T A L "BUNKS ’ AND 
mattresses, pillows, wooaen school 
de*ks. primary tables and chairs 
3 old stvie oortahie sey/ing ma 
, rhines, si. ,Maroaret's Sc'-ool 
T^yesdav-Fndav 9-3 p.m 479 7171. 

101 < liriJJRKVS 

MlS(K.U.A\E:ors 


KILSHAWS 

1115 FORT 
Cash Guaranteed 
APPRAISALS foe Sait Purposes 

auctions 

Fridoy - 7:00. 

, Ki'snaws Auctioneers Ltd. 

384-6441 


, £&>. M Ji Vm'X, *5 1""" »• 8j t *' 13 T, * M own "rKTl -ycn . «_wf * tolR : Nkn 

,iAn u.truCLAin niCLiiii veue 3 - COflff Sinfllf C« 0 , ie*^ 


SPFXTALTY SALK 
Over 1000 tooks, early edition, coi 
lectioie, children's annuals. — 


10 LOAVES OVEN FRESH 
read. 54.60. Cedar Hill Bakery. 
3115 Cedar Hill Rd. 595-2624. 


KlTCHENAID DISHWASHERS 
PLUS 

BUILDERS APPLIANCES 

KENYON SALES :*>H6-1214 

24-HOUR SERVICE 


STlHL Chainsaws 

iALES - PARTS - SERVICE 
G..BSON POWERCRAFT 
2520 Government 382-8291 


SUNRISE PASTERU RIZED 
-nil*. Whole M”k goodresYlTflW 
savings. Delivered. 479-1118 
PLUMS-BARTLETT PEARS 
weekend '.pedal-plums 24 lbs 55 
-ears 38 lbs , 511 288-4461 

BLUEBERRIES . HOOVER DIAL-A-MAI 

_ _ pAjiriv njr>Brf to order Dieese B#vrrest c®nni<lff vwmu^i 

ELECTROHOME ?S37»B2J ««'""» »« - 

• ■ — ■■ —- ---HDKti AS ntw. - 

FRESH CORN AND FREEZER I k.nn headboard. 523. 652-1526. 
corn. MicheM's. 3047 island View 
Road 


COLOR TV 

Rent to own 


BASEMENT CLEANOUT SALE - 
I Saturday morning. 8 30-12 JO only. 
SURPLUS OF CREPES FOR! Rugs, d-shes 3 piece overstuffed 
ia'e 3 doten for 54 642 4227 or' mlrreHaneous 'terns. 3029 Carrol; 

646-2823 Str.»el. Cash only 


DRIVEWAY SALE THIS SAT 
at ine corner of Obed Street and ’ 
Orillia Street Starts 9 a m Cash 
and carry Fridqe black and white 
TV, carpeting, two aquariums 
complete, clothing kitchen i*ems, 
oods and ends. et r Don't miss it. 

HR? WE IK ONLY AUGUST 2£TH 
7 V Seotemter 2nd Min bikes and Go 
n„ W v... 529 Kart Saie Everything reduced 
oecan coffee and end Pernaps vour otte-s Used Honda 
pecan cm ee an« * «t ep f rouqh 5125 Yamaha step 
- — ,k rouoh 8195. 2834281, if no an- 

ver. keep frying. 


Roll away cot 
2 |K'.’ c he6terfield 


STAINED GLASS 
CLASSES 


ALSO 


-RENT A TV BY THE WEEK OR NEW- 
*• 1r * p color TVs 825 per month at BUTLER BROTHERS 


11. 


, month — 510 delivery. 

CITY CENTRE TV 

OPEN to j.v 9 e.M 
6 DAY? A WEEK 

477-6971 

Next to-K Mart in the Mall 


478-7819 


VODERN CHESTERFIELD AND 
iova 


_ _ _ seat, Si25. Danish swivel 

NORMA MAGNUM chair, P5, two large sit on cush- 
boxes of shells. 845. «ons ^SjO, w/mger washer, 525 


R C.B.S. 
dies and 

382-0 1 Tl. 

REGISTERED SPALDING TOP BLACK CUSTOM-MADE 
Flioht 1 3 4 woods Ilka ntw, •■ro--<jrt Iron dinmq table 1 «*- 

477 2179 «le glass lop. 52/5 or best otter 

VlHHl ---Must p* seen. 383-66/5^ after 5 30 

FISHERMAN p.m. 

8W 8H 652 240i nriflfltr ' ° #W ' SPANISH DINETTE SUITE RED 

• w _ flora nattern, wrought iron sw/el 

ONE PAIR CCM BOY'S SKATES. hairs As ne/v 5100 or oilers 

S'/e 3Vy. 825. One oalr r«ckey '8-74)8. 

M its, 85. 479“ 


(79-7026 


LABOUR DAY SAVINGS. EN 

NEW CAMPBELL GOLF" CLUBS lira *.tock on sale. Cornucopia An __ 

and beauty Slatengar oag, 545 ' •** 7569 Penrhyn St Cadfcoro 931 FORT 

085 6825. Bay Village 477-0323. 

USED RCA CABINET STEREO - 


KLECTAON TV 
lot) BURNSIDE W. 

NEW FROM PHILIPS 

MAUNOVOX 

Colour TV by Philips, Specal 
troductory prices. 

>:>:>432 

DIGITAL 

Car radio-cassatta. See this new 

un-t at 

3 C. SOUND A RADIO SERVtCF 
" 383 4731 


APARTV'NI FREE7ER 

ioht 5-cft. now only 5268 — - - -- 

185^3832 Giant 26 eft chest irt rer now ARTIFICIAL FIREPLACE 5225 

' ^8 Bul-er Brothers 1720 Douglas, maple fhest on chest 5299 =0, Bo 

GRA VENSTE lN APPLES, 4QC m »Pt 3 * ■ _ ihart vedar ehee» f»60r Met*n faar- 

,:e' pouW IrTnti Tontalners. gains, .use Quadra 384 3152. Char 

364-9480 IS YOUR TELEPHONE UNAT 0lK available 

D lCK UP Y0JR MAC APPLES nVss^Buy^Or^rent^n^answe^ng MUST SELL DELUXE BED 

on way »o Saanich Fair, 25c to. machine trom interconnect 3586 room, sofa, sets Dinette stereo 

7073 West Saanicn Road. Quadra St. 38i-0SU. T.V draues ca'Oets and intercs' 

ORGANICALLY GROWN RED C^FA^ANCE PANASONIC'TECH- '"VnTg^T S *‘ r 3W ^ "" 

oeets 8nd b'ead and Gutter cuke* ? 0 i rr Tv and microwave 

<or pickling, 20c lb. 479-7096. . ... 


RENT 

WASHERS DRYKRS 
>TRNITl’RE 

1821 COOK 
HOT TUBS 
SAUNAS 

PRE i ESTIMATES _ 

Kosmar Industries 


^ atlni and'otner 5 m*,a/m« ?00 
eoa corating and o»ner maga/mes -uu . r*asira--ie x/t-0793 
piecas deprassion and othar glass Il0n - rf ^sinawie 4/s-o/yd. 

$G9 plus china. Items ol period c oth- p A ey CARRIAGE 555- BATH 
ings. hats, purses and ieweiery an£ i g; aocr oail, 5S, k>Hv iumpe- 
Miscellaneous furniture, prints and sjj.sjgc 

saa °*p t fSK J ATi-: housk sale 


919 CALEDONIA 
Mon Seot. 4, 10 2 p.m. Oniy 
NO PRESALE -TRMS CASH 
PLEASE - NO PETS OR 
CHILDREN 


BRAf’D NEW. GLOVERALL DUF 
♦el, s-re v n. cost 590 win sell 
tor 540 . 477-9316 . 477-5949 


*i»e 10 and size 1 


2951 Bridge 5t 
384 2623. 479 9492 alter 5 p n 


ANTIQUES - COLLECTABLES - 
Antinues. drive out in the country 
and find out Then*-is more man 
clean air ana icenery lo enjoy. 
Tfi»re a<^ antiques, country rotlec- 
ta,;i?s. West Coast ind-an Art ,0»d . u * 
1 g ;ns, carved ‘vory fne Persian 
rugs oil paintings. Quality Vidori- 
a.-i c urniture in oak walnut and 
mahogany At prices you can stilL 
afford. <iee Wyck Ant.aues. i26s 
ooke Rd ooen weekdays and 
SundAvs. 

POTTERY 
CLASSES 


.Ml SC KM .AN KOI S 

WANTED 


lartmo Sept 25, register now, 


TOMATOES 40C PER POUND 
6432 Pat Bay Highway. 


FEED POTATOES. 820 PER TON, *ith Jprinqs Walnut veneer double 
after 6 P m. 652-1546. ted and side ra ts. 477 3291 

GREEN FIELD TOMATOES, 2SC MOVING SALE 


ledend'ors • ,ad* trees Small 
,ades. prayer plants, sansivenous 
c ean « s new. v«J2 strong canvas *1) , p £ ,e#se c *" * ,,er 10 am 

tent. Iwo single tubular steal beds -_*' u "__«__ 


FHK S.VlA’ATiON ARMY 
Needs y.>ur re-'.i^able rlotb- 
inL. furniture and hniiselktl i 
z khIs. "Help us to heiu 

Deski box' Jpr.ng and ueadboard. stereo Others ” F 8 m 1 1 V Tiintt 
Aopiiances r/ssttie deck, electric kettia, 4 <( 0 p s Yirloria Sidney an l 
lar'oa and small Books China slice toaster tis-'inq waders sue 9 ,lu ‘ ; / * 

aity hems strreo*. tapes s gahon gas tank ^^jwse to; Lancriord. For pickup 


...77 ANTIQUES. WARDROBES TREA isu^d (raft S'jonlv 384 0421 
PLANTS -fwiny machines Sideboards - . _ _ _ r _. 


oven. AM 1978 stock reduced t 0 LARGE,. ATTRACTIVE PLANTS r am "-7wi™ machir^a' SW*b 04 _ — 
ic,? 9 r . E -.HC • urn.ture . ,04 V'tw j 0 r tRjm* or^o'fice. asoidestra pr jf ed *mc!deriT*t-rn lure Chest-oh S*ZE BED FRAME 

drawers, china jaolpets 

EASY CRiM WITH mattSESS ao ” Prayer piams. sansivenous 3 tvle toveseat Appliances ^stne am, eiecmc ««'"«, * Stores 

t,90Y CH'B ----- rti Pieas»- rail altar -,n an. ^ 3 . rh.na Ice toaster 'isnmq waders sue 9 ,lu *‘ 

gat'on uas tank and nose for Lanciortl 


FLAIR 


oer pound 1742 Hovev Road 


Items cooks; ska 
caroets, desr bed 
dav-Monday 12-4, 

RJ. 


rVcwfls Recondihoned bievcies boel. ? o««r‘ of rh.ldrar.» snow 
Lawn mowers.^Numerous miscel'a; Mots v/eJjF and^? 

on* 108 
le sewing 


e8t>»3295. 



M l»S4 KLLAN FOl' N 
FOR SALE 


PARKER HALE »-06. * POV;BR 
8 snneli scope, used ore season 
9250 4’§-4031 

MARLIN a-M r ARBINE WITH 
scope, 5150; Winchester n odei 25. 

it Shotgur, 5175 479-5094 

MAUSER'aCTION CUSTOM 30-6 
and 2'/$ power scope. 477-4657 

81 C AMERAS. StTPIMJES 
and PHOTO KlMSIlINf 

Early Registration 

For BW and Colour 
Dark Room Course* 
Starting Now 

Bill's Photo Supply 

1U75 Douglas 
.*33-7443 or ”.S^ 2521 
NEW HOl'RS ft -:..Mi 
TH1-RS. AM) FRI: ft-9 
LAN (J FORD STORE- 
NOW OPK.N* 

800 (JOLDSTRKAM 
v?-2712 

OAK LAV STOKE 
ALSO NOW OPEN 
2047 Oiik Ba> Avp. 


FOR LOWEST PRICES 
shop at 

DODD’S FURNITURE 
2563 QUADRA 381 


very reasonable at 58V - 25" AD- 1*68 DATSUN SEDAN REC 

MIRAL Color TV walnut cabinet room ca'r, fiterqlass. doma liqht, 
... good picture 5249 Fleetwood Spanish style entrance hall lioht. 

Mediterranean 5299 Zenit" 70 — main hall and dining room lights. 

FLEXSTEEL COLONIAL CHES ,9 " B & W Admiral <89 Prone 742-4543 after 2 pm 

terfiaid suita, axcalJan' construe- Bv»'er | Brothers, WiO Douglas St , . Fn . u. cn samfy rbu xs 

Sfc E ? K ! E S,«Ki«,* i£- 

SUPERB NEW STEREO SYS tor oanos. tarbeques. 1 Sc each. 
LOVESEATS. GREEN ANO »em uuxman L 100 amp, 110 watts delivered. 47j.*io 
goid t.oral. 5150 each, single g«r cnanne- $1250. Two Klh L'ttie 10 .., |T , a , 

, ixsprni'i, mattress and fram#. Baron speakers. $600 Thorens 14S W ALNUT ARBORITE BUFFET. 
530 652-1631 CMK H tgrntabie v/ilh Stanton ti-»cn and tea wagon. 4 lamps. 4 

„ .681EE c*rtr;dge 5410 Compieie Petrs curtains assorted curia.r 

cANOPY WATERBED, QUEEN- system S/150 Phone 598 3489 Sat- rods, 478 7039 
we. 6 drawer peuestal corner urdav. Sundav and Mondev 

sne ves, bookcase headboard. 8550 CARPORT SALE - SOMETHING 

,>r trade \pr car or truck. 595-2996 1-1 PI D ** • v « r VO"« t varything must 00 

nLLr 16 .peedboat 1 9,a Auci Sat , 10-4 

TMIN BEOS WITH BOX SPRING, too many color TVs taken in ’20 Westing Road, J82-9*60 
nett rest and castors, Berk^wood .rad* Come .n - make w otter ROCKWELL BEAVER TABLE 
IIrtmems, CITY CENTRE TM next to Mw . $300 pjor.e*,. chain Mw $,,0. 

a 1 “B*" ’B - * # m - Ax minster woot 9xl? cerpet $75. 

6 days a work. Rocker chair $50 474-1687 

“l5 


GARAGE SALE POJ3L ' T ABLE, 
•ns is washer soin orver dav bed. 
Black a«d white TV Numero-s 
other article:. U 64 Stroud. 
<«7C5> 


BATCH—WHITE WEAR Sijnd , v 
requires no fir.nq T jesdav Salur ijr,oav 

tree classes, - Monday mounted 
7-9 pm any at7*rnoon com- MOUNT fcU 


WE BUY 


night. 


GAR AG* 1 SALE 9 4 1/72 HAMR 


DEER HEAD 550 

Bay C Ave ^ 1S:5, cnikl* rocked ^Kroehler arrS' cnair 

0a J. V* 2 ' " Wrought iron am cha-r. Electric 

'NEARLY mpu/ uinnros, co<,et cerk U " niaf ' 0 * 1 ’VPterit- 
* n k L Y >irW MODERN tgr. p«,r af table lamps Fold 

Psnire. books, st. mcs. be*« ^s.'dlft^ coaN. healy'^-' i^ le S *T 0 V < TV Ub^ M ^i| P *ern 

Cf, interior and exterior paint >n cardigans Reasonable price ,# “ le Fo ° r TV ,ab W - * 
ovsi run, Ate 5 * 8»!5 minings o^ly 

HAVE PURCHASED SEARS. SEAj_Y DOUBLE BOX SPRING • p." inwiRi DELUXE FRiDGE 

Kenmore Dryer, selling Aqua co and mattress $150. Green plaid p ‘'x'D* , RL DELUXt twiuut 
de-^a-rcd.*_*2?5 Ptxle hard vaciP 


t#jle" c our Tv tables 
stand. 525. Other items. 
595 3379 


table 

cuaov hackoack, piavben. ciack used furniture TVs and ei r> 
feed white Tv 60 sal aou»rium, ances (cr cash. Man Furniture, 
new N gauoe tram set. ,575 Chev ^5 ?j;s. 1821 Cook 
28. engine. U bolt and 12 toll rear 
end. 8' fluorescent Wahl. 65 Envoy 
Heir transmission and «naine 
Austin 1500 angina and trars. 

'55-57 Fontiar and Chev v.ind 
Sheid 478-9774. 


CASH 


1-7 1 


Ot/ice Desks 

New. private 656-5979 


urn 515.-00-42?!^ 

RAINY DAYS AHEAD 

Get your doors okis windows 


squar.\ 

fridge: 

freeier. 


SGNOECK AND YARD SALE. 
Satytday and Sunday 30-5. Good 
sa'e fo r somenne startii o 1 b a 
hew home. Plants,, kite 
wood, tricks, 
ends Huovj 


♦or your furniture 
AI Lunds Aucttoneeis 

386-3308 


MOVING SALE 
Friday. 610 p.m., Saturday 1?-6 
p.m Sunday 6-ir, furniture 
dishes etc.. 3-$46 Simcoe St 


wn.te, laris cross tog 
2 trispers 4 shelves, 
your doors okis windows square, 5155. Apartment sue 
mouldings *;c stripped now at iridqe 5»0. Excellent condition. 

Ba?°?'3e^2533 i,tr# S ' l ‘ op,rs ' 354 i?/ 5}?s 


ISO westinghouse custom ^x.pnno Vnd maVtVets 


WANTeI BASTION THEATRE 
would gratetuhv accept dona'.on 
lots of odds and of wigs, viniage ctothnq. tjr* 
.-.asher and dryer jeweir* accessories shoes, etc 


21 Our for costume department 


EEOING 


I PRETTY LDVESEATS. KIDNEY . . 

< aoed fluted cecks, newly uphol- MUST SELL SANSUI 7500 AMP a ^ ^ 

i'lflaoof’SSffaiMlI?- SSSTS& «S!w*3«MSTt 8fL TSW5!?: e T3'.«? r "Ii» 

GOLD COLOUR CHESTERFIELD ir n besf 2 Stf^ !t, $g^3«3 ar ' ,ne,S *' 500 V92 7997. 

and dr2ssar ,25 $250 QU T Stf 23 pair OF laRGF tannoy PORTABLE MANUAL TYPE 

drc,e' 5200 23,8027. ^ 

m.?.r U ,c B s L .^ bOX E Slilt. exceMant ^Vnn^^OnrRe.VhTt^ ”0-« 5 *”«” 
condition Slu3 H: 849* AA-214. <150 Phone 385-7868 a:t*r VIKING COPPERTONE PAIR 

5pm and weekends douhie oven and fridoa. excellent 

WOVING -ELUNO SOFA BED. MWdllta,. SM0 Of no.fOJl ofir 

;*« ^; a «r7£f c ' , * ,r fv miowT^,’«i,«’i <=*» »•«« .._ 

5i...;i /.- T 1 MirCH1NG Jr' ,v -**• w X. ER «^iff cC e^'*^«““ 0! ' 

Wbalrver you nrefl *'Sf ‘ 

us FIRST! We Harry the 


SECURITY CHAins AND CABLF 
BICYCLE LOCKS 
PRICES LOCK AND SAFE LTD 

HASTINGS APPLIANCES *‘ 7 For1 s * 234 4T0S 

'If we don't have tn* part wa'll pirinvAi uininv/m 
tel! you who has. 'IUNAL APPLIANCE 

CUBIC 2100 DOUGLAS 386^77Gj SER 'iCE guarantaed sajes oarts. 

McDonald supply 


464 BURNSIDE e! C#l at Ljn i' 0 A )' C, ^^yrQ L,a 

NCINERATOR BARRELS, 56 DE 386-3308 


ranee Rd First driveway on- left ,>#6-8301 
side after switchcack curve. _ ^ 

60 YEARS OLD NEED' 

MUST SELL S PCE. ANTIQUE new wardrobe size 4*48 - 
tyne maple tea-nom su.te, 522s. Please itemize supposed to r- 
Lika new coffee table And 2 end dieting Riease redv to Victor => 
taoies. 5125, Vikim console stereu Press Bo* 33 

in mahopany cabinet 550 9 * 12 _ — — _ 4 _ — 

rust carr>*t 54 O. Sinole bed. i 10 - -W-A W T E D REFRIGERATOR 
Black and while consclt TV. $70 freezers ranges washers, drverc 
213-7735. good condition, or suitable for rer- 

-. ^ NEW GCOOS THAI JUST HAFTA C **" 

nformation o'ease call Don 00 B-i dishwasher 5251 - ADMI 

' ■“*' - - RAl>*S C ranja harvest qold $438 NfcFDED BY ST MICHAEL 

Maytaq Dishwasher Portable student, daily ratern trip Deep 
M J201 white only <518 (save Covc-Victoria, Mon. Fri Wilt snaf* 

McClary Range HG 5388 ‘Butler trsvei expenses. 656-5641 days 
Brothers. 1720 Douglas “ 

383-6911 


BOOK 

AUCTION 

SEPT 12. 7 P M. 


Amana Radar Range iiverad s?re?nscovers, extra 

307 GORGE RD 3*6-67 45 J’ a , rr ?i l r «moved, rusonabie \lna»l fArnmifC 

479-4067 after S oe«ore 8 a m NOCI \»,erarnitb 

POOk »ALE - A1 _ ■ 1716 Island Highway. 47ft?221 ROYAL DOL’LTCN FIGURINES 

Pocket books 1 for 75r, comics 5c P ^R SALE - BLUE EVENING C i Mr jpecial $2 79. regular PLEXIGLASS >DFAi FOR ** n ’«t tv pr vale parlv Prtl» 

eacn Snowden * Books 419 John- cown. s,z* IJ. 14 , ,5100 or otte $ 3 ;* 9 9V * 1 fnoshiid* strrm w nnois older hut w 1 1 consider recent ones 

Only ” Complete Ceramic Supplies °° af s, ^ rm —fl 

\Nith targe greenware selection 


6Se 234 evenings. 
ROYAL OOL'LTCN 


CHAINSAWS 


worn once 652-4531 




carry 

lection 

I'nzi'Aphir «qui{ ment and 
aci'cs.soric*. 


dly photo 

1227 Gov't. 

315-5633 

YM-YWCA 

PHOTOGRAPHIC EXPEDITION 

STRATHCONA PARK 
4 davs Mondev-Sundav, September 
ti-17 5100 18 years and over co¬ 
ed. Victor!* TM-Y9VCA, 880 Court- 
n*. s- Pr.^re 336-7511 

OPENING SfiFT.4 

PiC-STOP PHOTO, Cedar HiH 
Mill, island Colour Lacs, a s 
Fort St 

HASSELBLAO 500-C. 80 MV 2 8 
Planar ions and Sekonic Aoe/ 
L IB hunt metor. 595-3 gr bast 
offer. 382-4777 cetwaen 6-7. 


THESTERFiELD, MATCHING us. 

and ooW. 550 ATLAS STEREO AN# TV S55 : i Mustang bike. 530. age 7 13. 
763 Fort St 385-2712 :/*.$ 944 . 

NEW SET OF HARDWOOD BUNK MOVING UP MUST SACRIFICE BAYCREST'CUSTOM 'i|“CuTfT 
-is for sa " 39;' wide Soring Only i-vear old 25 wet's oer chan free z#r, Mike n«w $225 24' AMC 
filled mattress, S2S0. 38A-3681 r-ei Sansui recelffer Teac ’ape- iriug*, 0 <y>d condition, $75. 

rm nr a! madi c Tvuiw eers Pro-llnttr SP*ak*rS. eudlo S9>-097B 

r C 2^? h r.",* tumtable with Empire Cart- 

m irariniEus. SV1 73f3 ' fi ^’ # N ‘ w co,t & A « A GE 

hutch, miscei eneous. 5W-73n. of | erti 382-9JJ9. Household 

*- 0, ECE TEAK DINING ROOM -ances. 63 

suite good condition. Asking 8800 QUALITY STEREO 479-1274 


hARPORT SALE - SOMETHING 
f.-r everyone. Everything must 00 

14' foot speedboat 197.-. Audi. Sat 

erdat.. K to 4. 


BEAUTIFUL ANT.QUE BED 
'ooir^sjite, tables, t carpet etc. 

F3R SALE SPEED QmFEN 
v/ "»her and dryer household fur 
mshinns 477-2613 


COMODOR MANUAL TYPEWRIT- 
er and Contexad addinq machine 
Kircy unright vacuum and attach¬ 
ments. near new Brunswick 4 'ax9 
pool taole. and equipment 
598 5671. - 


boat winoshieids storm w nctows 
anopv windows retrioerato) 
shelves, hundreds of c»es for URGENT' GAS STOVE AND 

home hobby or industry also xm^,: refrqeratcr under counter 

ava.latle in colors »MhE PLAS . pret^'-edi Low cost olees* 

TK ^SHOP, 2105 Douglas St 385-8737. 

SFO T Q*PAl CANOE DESK AND r.ering r achr« jnao- sme" 'e'te 


SALE. SATURDAY 
items, electrical eppli 
Bea/tr La«6 Road 


-477 2 4A 


PREPARE FOR SCHOOL. ELEC 
»r‘ter. book of knowtedoe. 

people 


TAnic YAMAHA TURNTABLE ANO RE 

COFFEE TABLE. END TABLES. CElVER CUSTOM BUILT lM .- . 
c• U°'»2°l62* r#>SOnaW# ' D #ai# SPEAKERS. 5700 . 388-9820 R ^ *6^781 

GRANGE DOUBLE MATTRFSS CM^'qlOO#*aco'ut.^nwlei *^JLi« C0 |^t2 U ^ D < -ant° ) ^ 

bexsormj and metel «r*me. 5150. 40 A. firm onc_e $45. 77f7 Amelia ^e *e\v 5KC ^ 


5‘ S-Q307 

LANE CEDAR CHEST. 

ce'ient condition, value 

Offers* 575-0207. 

SEALY POSTUREPEDIC 
dnub'e bed, furniture, 

tt4-98?0 


Ave , Sidney. 456-1843. 

SANSUI 60 40 RECEIVER WITH POOL TABLE. 4X1, BOSTON pREE ROCKV SUITABLE FOR 

F O S. turntable and two Pro and snooxer bail*, wail racx. cues '-m-derumi 1760 Bay Street 

linear 10C watt soeaktrv Toshiba *3™ 478-72*1 <954)942 anytime 

dac,r ' 5,00 o' P** 1 oH#r 2 1 CUBIC FOOT VIKING 1 DOUBLE BED AND HEAD- 

freeier, 3 veers old. Excellent con- t0 ard with new reversabie bed 

PIONEER SX 6*0 STEREO RE- <t N, un, S'-'* -7/ $-.09 spread. 471-472? After 4 

VILAS UNITS ~ 2 BCOKCASH 1 A ° Y s BiCYCLE^ 835 BABr VACUUMS. CANISTER AND 

. ests and comer desk Value ^ ,e Sansuii LM-220 soeekers. *750 ^ stroller 815. Ml*hch*ir uprignt exieMent suction on both, F 

S18W asking 513CC 598 - 425 J *' r,r '•^-48^ $ 15 . 385 . 4 * 34 . 545 end 83 * 385-5475. r 


bookcase, welahts and rench. bunk gress /,itf- numcerinj caoarnui 
EEL CHAIR. EVERET c ,^ «f s lc?7 * 54 ’ 5<J ‘^ or ^ ^ «reniiSi 4 

MESH PLAYPEN 8^8 UM- 1 «? *"• 15 " #n, » d,liv « ra d ‘T^TinhV h^^tin^r" 0 ^ POnqtablt gas powered * MONEY PA|'d‘5 

broiler similar new 570*^ length 5 _ ®onH^l e«ellen? mndltiolT Win ,no ^*' nlan,? motorcycle custom 'Bowks. 

crev leather coat with hood size COL F BAG CLUBS. CAR T „[} f0 J. jjoc 52.000 new Phone ’»»rc Ealohone nuitar man * den * Books. 419 Jonnson stree 

14. 885 O.l stove $35. 479-6459 mounted U" tires, crystal blan 6JA6B24 after's. Ie*»fyr iacket 477 U31 ,0 • ,J| , . _ 

MOFFAT STOVE, *100; FROST k *’ S 477 9 29 ^ TOSHIBA SOLID STATE PORTA- » P'ECE. BLONDE WOOD B 2D rA * M 

Vikihg trldge. $720 Ph. LUMEN AIRE CARPET TEAK tig color T V $320 firm Also '\*■- -*00 conct.tlon, 

^ .1? * $125. perfect condi- Sears Fridoe. 13 cubic teef. left * 1i0 ®V' ,r 

GARAGE SALF f '° n ' 477 * ,,#r 1 B n '’ r '• n<, d00r Quit# new. needs door 

encyclopedia. SeKrdav/’s#Bfamber 2, 10 5. 2i19 UNISEX NATURAL COLOURPD |lnar 38*-’?TV even-ngs 

Belmont Ave. hardknlf sweater, tennis design. LADY'S 14 KT YELLOW GOLD 

size 26 40. 830 656-4354. solitair* diamond ring. 3 7 mm x 

- 3 8 mm, of approx. 75 caral Re- 

cenlly appraised $2,575 5ISC0 
4,7 <78 6735. 


l HIGHPACK MAHOGANY DIN* 
Ins chairs, $120 Konka T3. 
8 42-5187. * 


Imoe-i 


Frigidaire 


etc,, * 4 ** 9 


reasonable 642-4211. 


}-V^ SCyBA - NK ^‘-- r 


MINOLTA ) 
condition, AE 

Will sell wltl 
598-8277. 


frtto _ 416 c„ AO-XA turntabTe”cur ?s?i007 C * IVO ** 


- best offer Call 

EXCELLENT af,f ' r 4 . 477 ' ,4lf mq Sl» 595-2144, ba<110-1, $-7. 

screen. yi/F RE MOVING. HOUSEHOLD »,„, T ce., rOLOi'R TV 

.irnovl Itn. .rM-WW.. **'•"*» ,M luo.1. KKI, ,£2t°,Zt X 

Ure 384 015J recorder, microphone. 359 Foul 

BOLEX 'SUPREME' 16 MM Nevv OVERSTUFFJO SOFA ANO 

sone‘s*<450 n 384:3997 1 " * CC *‘ t ) 7 0 m«c' r4,Chin# Cha,r * ^ KrNWOOO AMP. JVC FM 

“ 4S0 - 94 ' ww 284-0155 tuner an - F'ertrohpme color TV. 

MAMIYA RB67. I?Z MILLIMETER c| NGL f « E D WITH BOX 1 ZS 1 ??98 after 6. 
lens, new, *>2 9350 between 10-V» w 


_ ^ VACUUM 

ragutator. $185. tie#her ( and power head, ail at- NF v 

'arnments, $2?s or rest offer, di»he* 
385-5475. winter boot' 


APKANSAs-WISHITA 
Honing stones. Island Saw Cn 

Chatham st.. $85 5500 

FRANKLIN >lRFPt Aft r/sxi ANTIQUE WALNUT SIDEBOARD an'd misc 

j:m ijo * 1 d.r,h, !;„ii» n,M ' l »7* s Li. 5 l C ,"! 0P . Y J°* 

hew « o ALl0N 01 . IANK 3Ssr.3r.«rc^&-^..‘ 

On. ?V, N 1' SINGER AUTOMATIC IN WORK sun trutk 5100 All excellent cor 

i;*.47» ’ k cabinet. 5100 l adies ? sowed Phi;- dltlrn 3*6 314? 

1 os twenty 575 CantMTS chair 
PLACE SCREEN LIKE °* k iwlvci. 

hammered trass 24-' x 42" 


... fabrics, mlcelleneou:, 
autcrnaec dishwasher avocado M3 5504 
?::^,. 0O0d ' Aorki ' > <l or<1 * r 1,50 WANTED PAIR OF FRENCH 
’S ' 445 doors, each |0 x24 glass pa; 

GARAGE SALE — 9-4 SAfiJR «*’* r ' or ,y P* hardwar* 

dav. September ? 2621 Doncas'er J 6 06W 
!between Pearl and Mrytle) 10' SQUARE OEAL BUY 

Clinker built boat 5-speed men s Alum num - lead - cooper — 
bike, o.l t#nk sl<d nq shower door qr?ss pop bottles 


SMALL 5 BURNER STCVE. SIN< 
qi" bed, swag lamp. 2 0l»5s doors 
:o * ?7 V thick also large stain¬ 
less steel sink, 383-6853. 


597 185$' GARAGE 'ALE SAT AND SUN . 

^eot 2 *md ‘3. 1? noon to s p.m 
,>070 Rent'cw Ro»d. Snawriioan 
t rkr ngSt-ry. (mtigue* books 
kTchen aneds. tjnniture plant* 


F' OOR POLISHER, HOSTESS 
chair, U" tires, kitchen teble. vac¬ 
uum. 47M7291. 

GARAGE sale, from books 
to coats. 771 Monterey Avenue, 10 
a.m.-4 p.n 


10" CRAFTSMAN RADIAL ARM 


SPECIAL TEMPERFO SAFETY 
gi#9* 100 oes 34 x 68 34" »76" 

and $4" x 78 x three *ixieenths 58 
lo *10 each 479.1J0S 


GARAGE 


colonial maple, 8120 ,1 ALMOST NFW RFFL TO RFFl 
loaded Sony deluxe. Must see. 

•El-L *NO FINE OLD OAK BUFFET In EX* 5^3134. 

Mr£,TxC«lSlt^Won'^r C0ndl,,0 - n - ,22S - 386-1096, FXCELLFNT CONDITION, 

R'i KAN4*l-.R, HTOVf.S 
ami IT KNACKS 


camoer or boat. Over $500 
new. only 5230 with tank. 478-3470. 


HOOVER WASHING 1 
. r _ 1 for sale Reeso n at-ie pi 
* 1 good condition. 382-3319. 


ONE WALNUT BED, FOAM 
, mattress -ipod condition, reason- 

1 ,.ble. 154 7802. 


$173 and $250. - 


AUTOMATIC IMPERIAL OIL. CLEAN 


and drum. 595-2831. 


-•» ■* - TWO-PIECE GREEN 

oil stand Chesterilaid suite, $150. Swivel 
1 rocker, 840 . 658-5568, 385-9173 


^IL 6 ,’ Tw0 TW,N ftE0S F o" SALE - 

479-1161, Exrellent condition, $90. 721-S440. 


PROPANE RANGE, 10 
drill, oven, good shea 

4/9-1231. , 

LEAS E-PURCHASE PLAN ON Ml-1 dltlon.^So.^KSf 592^2». C ° M * 

crowave ovens. 385-3132. Butler '-tv -.t;—- M 

Brothers, 1720 Dougla*. 1 SEALY DOUBLE BOX SPRING 

^(Ch^X N U U S^ Y I 7 >Tececa^ved^oak dining 

condition. 1113. 479-3407 after 3. roomsulte. $$75. 30>6I19._ 

LAY DOWN FURNACE COM- SEATS AND CHAIR, 

piefe with 230 gallon oil tank, 3! _ 

veers Old, 8 40 0. fc- ftos _ kino SIZE WATERBED, SBOO. 1 

30' ELECTRIC STOVE, INOLIS 1 tW»t*r. »40. 3064M 1. 1 

Bag 

K E N M 0 R E SELF-CLEANING : j®,? 
stove, white, excallent condition, 

8310. 656-4837.. O 


ADMIRAL 73" COLOUR CON- 
so'e TV. solid wood cafe' 
reliant condition, 303-3040. _ 

EXCELLENT CONOiVlON, 
hi»ck and white; 1123 color; 
egarenteee. 383-8774, 302 1234. 


$310_ 

C O A^SI NAT 


O N 4 BURNER 


Radio include* whip antenna, 
592-6228._ . 

ARC AT 210 SCAN&iR 


OAK DINING TABLE WITH 6 
chair*, very new, 8350. On* OE 
f loor poli sher, 835. 479-225L 

CASH REGISTER, 1920." BRASS 
on mahogany, first 8450 takes. 
477-7707._ 

MOVING, SELLING' DOUBLE 
ped^excellent condition. 477-7863^ 

•" TABLE SAW, EGG CARTONS. 

479 4354_ 

GENORON FOOL TABLE. ANO I 
bells. 8110. or best offer. 314*2755. 


MARANT7 «$0 TSFEDECK, 
month old, $275. 308-7000. 


1 {POWER REEL MOWER. 

1 Ford station wagon, $260. 1 


M PLAYERS, 840 
and $50. 599-Jr 

YAMAHA^^TJDO TUNER 


7UX iv, xuwixx 

eervicei «20. 477- 
RCA 21'' BLACK ANO WHITE TV. 
excellent condition, $40. 364-5753 


OROTBRIFA. MEAT 
nod PRonrrF 


eiertrir and wooden coal burner HARDWOOD BUNK BEDS, GOOD jrc.— ii.t 4 TftaT~ m im —mb i HIDE-A-BEDS, 830 EACH, 
stove. 312-3045 | condition, $65. 479-8941. 1*.?)? .PQTATtyS.^tt.OO PER Baby butOV, S 40. 477-3612._ 

SMALL JIGSAW WITH MOTOR 
Copper range hood. 479-6203 


IT' .MpFFAi JlfJCURE WHITE TNB^ift SIOO. ANTJQUE^BRASS 


ranee. $129. 598-1376. 


DOUBLE BED 8300. 


j tack, also carrots, $3 00 oer sack. 
6095 Pa* Bay Hwy„ phon*.after 6 
le.m;. 657 1546. 


TWO TURBtNATOR SALON HAIR 
dryers. 87S each. 479-7204. 


years eld. Ilk a new, >200. 652-31 

36" WOOOLATME. OOMFLETC 11 
chisels, S300. best offer. 198-1746. 

HEAVY DUTY^CLOTHES DRYER, 


j*31??t. Il?» Hillside N3-tjci 

rlXti paiU FOH 
n" your i-ousaholo ite- s Un .x- 
m Trading Centre, 584 jonnso- 

,t . 34/-M2 

.Art'i£> Ok NT LE WENS VlN * 
t,>w" clothing, aucessonaj, m 
wtMerv. 1840 >?40 ere 363-0<O‘ 
48* 0VII. 

NORTHUMBRIA STERLING 
Normandy Rose pattern ln'er»M 
e<J n rny.riumoer of plat# Mi 
t.ngs Mj%. 

MODE'- A PARTS WANTFD 
Giill ' shtli rear ouartrr pane , 
Hoad,ter trunk i»d. .63-$010 

SINGLE* FRENCH DOOR 3? 
y.ide approx. 80 ‘ high, 1 : « thick 
$i‘-0304 

197* pn ” -—- - GENUINE PFRSIAN CARPE I. -- - 

“ gallon ARINGER WASHFR, STOVE. 9x12 5 250 Yellow t'k Victorian AOODfc N DUCK DECOYS Ol!- 

2 fridge* glass shelving, ceiling chesterfield, S75 Older Atco tut gla*.s, crystal. Hummel items 

aimer coats, size 11 tio. 398-2370 jti-o.tos, 3S6-09U 

DRILL PRFSS. WOOD LATHE OLD CAR BATTERIES. RADl* 
ELECTROLUX VACUUM stereo and ’’and air hruxh scuba tors coooer, brats, lead 383-1378, 
cjttrj.r and oowqr naad all at- ff/ir* e"uiomtn», small slid* pro S/6 Davd 

BERRY GARAGE DOOR, $75 OR freezer, t-Jaardjtd!^# n#i' K $So S^eT 1 *' **** " <>»♦*'•'• r,pr 7 »’ r 06 3 > 1 C >PEED 

nearest offer phone 386-3025. 788 7886 * %7X 10-GALLON AQUARIUM COM i cha n saw parts 

At,r> — 7m -=— - LADY KENMORE CONVFRT- p *>te 5?0 B nk beds 525 a*ae A/.nfed .'84 219/ 

AND fkdMylr °S 1 X. S ^£ - .^ W ..« C U 8,C 1618 dlehwast-ar. Avorado green ulrdh facie. 570 spefd noa$ 5375 - . A . TC r, AK .v o 

N0T 0N , vns/ T NG9~¥i7^r‘1—W WOOD CANVAS CANOE. 8250 CARAGF SALF SATURDAY al4?9*0175. 

_ lutllltv N trall^ UV f>2Yf? F . P r J** 1 ’ 0»f6F. Wet OUlt for person a m-4 n nr »<t3 Lnnchs.d* . m'le yuAurxn 

WINE JUGS, 1 GAL, 5 GAL, IB 1 7?1.%S (VlcSrl*)** "*^rww6t. 5’6', $30. 383-4283. south of Am.ty BO rad ai #rm 

gal. reasonable. 652-2392. —^- 


set or ironstDnf 

tnf^ -air. new pair long 
i/e 8 -'78 9i07 

, . __,........... admiral fridge • px 

saw, >375. Black m De-kar Rr>.tar celled! condfflon. ? y##rs old * 4 » older model 23 cu it. ex.e'lenf 

388 7663° V ^ v 8 ,lan ’* *’06 Offers /I? *.'737 working order $150 Call 479-806; 

. - - NFAR new HARVEST GOLD AFAPTMEKT FRIDGE. 5120 GE only weshina machines. 

OORGFOUS NORWEGIAN BLUE portable r asher arrf ,|rver asinno Taii*man selt-cleaninq stove. 5270 tom« workshop suuolits, 

PROPANE ELECTRIC Eridgf W C 2£?xt-‘C0 ‘#t or nearest offer. 746~dN3 Crder Picnic bench. 525 All In ex 

%°%tS? L ir e 'ZS. <£i ,0 SSi "• " m "•** "" 7 ;..v .. «■«»«•>«“- 


SALE. «;AT. AW 
' lamps, 
.BP __| eneln, 

etc I56J Cekcrest Dr 


fiberglass may 

•Yt’Jer waved resin, 
721 r-55 Victoria. 


Oi/TDOOR iNCINtRATOR 3AR 

-els. Reedy for us*. 5595 d# 
lv#r#d 383-1371 - ^ 

PERFECT CONDITION, LADIES adia”!*m 5w T i6tf wtth T acctli “' ’'l 
lord ijOYTL^ other clothlno, Size sori**, M n MJ0 65?43T7 * cc *9* 


$30. 313-4213. 

VACUUM?. "CANISTER ANO 


TREADLE SEWING 
machine stand, suitable for spin . 
nmg. 479-1543. 


BRICKt (USED) li^WBRE-lets and u.k. °nii E «iL J .£5‘ upright, excellent aueUon on both. W A $ T F KING UNIVERSAL 4rrCOTCP , ... 

ike tat 2l sir «6«ll 'win. * #,¥ * • W *Y 18-i3 and 835. 388-6297 sU'-l**'. sire, i-jitt m dlshwasrer. BEER BOTTLES ACCEPTED 4?6 

° *** hMf motor "A-’ 717 nrlra*. Md.j-ua f0w} condition, S?25. 597-1978. Williams St cr *HI pick al Hotel'. 

OAK DESK, TWO LAMPS AND ^**^- 
urusual old ratine' Apply 700- ' AA .N TED . 

163$ Chambers 


glass boat and motor. 366-9712. 
O AVID'S 


! nrlces, 5*?-734S. 

uaviu j r lUMBNG, FOR AL1 PORTABLE ELECTRIC TYIM-1trA’ ninoitw 
your, hot water needs, nflgl. i -MceHent condition, 8121, j ^MTJt SSni efSrT^' 
UNDE RWOOO FORUM OFFICE 4 " v 


^electric typewr iter7 ^00. 5f?°9t58. Cc | ho GAUGE MOoeL RAILROAD,] Muloment*fdr SST 

r^ 0A J^ N CO^Wl7 K 3Kl5f R ■£'.£&£•! 7?Su6 E ' d0n 1 N0 - Ch ^ ue * ,7 *- ,M 

ft< 7,ffS SJtLglML ARTiEiriAi uicnmur El LING BRADFORD Sf 

8 GALLONS LINSFCD OIL FO* ,,„7' F ' C i^L D „ N i . G .L A ^1,'. 4 washer. Ilka new. A»klnf 860 
I*. 395-5134. 0,nk ,nd «**t offer i79-4802 


BEAUTY SALON 
sale, open to offers 
474-1843 


nett llgnnnfl Blent, 388-7 


GARAOF SALE FRIDAY 
SATURDAY, 10 am - 6 
315 6366 


.7 CROSSCUT SAW. ADZE 
, slick, peavy. Top dollar paid 
385-'791J. 282-7501 


sale. 

GARAGE 


8SS W L 1? V B6r U 1?aS) SHA# OLDER-WOODEN DESK wist 

carpet, IP X 15 , 865. 7,1 5330 #d< pre » frit i v ruU-tofl, also, book 


__ . -_ , bad price, 365-8264 

x -._ x _ SALE, FBiDAY AND | p . Awn A1JT10 .._....'UTILITY TRAILER, 4 BY 6, $!00. > -AIR cOCCER BOOTS. SI7F ? case. H3-0405. 3864)911 
Set , lJ-2. 9690-Sth Sidney. eieSaff^IJJJ 1 *' otd^° MT ' *5i-' 479-347^. osod condition. $10 *:rm. 507-79*5 


HOOVER OIAL-A-MATIC, 675. CERAMIC KILN. CRESS cleaner $15. *32-4145 after S p.m 
Comp tft* with tool*. 59 2-2639. hlflh fire, »5", $150. 593-5431. | « AvrB *. T — 


4169 avenlnga. 

FRANKLIN ~FIREFLACE, 
new. 8133. 366-6965 


_ BAYCREST SEWING MACHINE. 
‘ excellent conditlor 
tv. 5100. 476-7743. 


HIDE A BED $175 OFFERS , 

Suitcases, 163-4479. avenln ,* 

AVOCADO FRIDGE AND STOVE ' GARA&t SALF 1I49GON7ALE 
the pair, 5450. 384 S4IB. I Ave. Friday. Saturday, Sunday. 


-4 — 

* 




z-*r ‘-V— 




v ^ \ 


«•> . , • 


r 


■ 41 


















































V 


V 






IM MlMlUiABlMli lie (.AKIlEN BVPHUlCR i 

WAM1H _ \ 

CASH 

costume towettory. auotitv used 
ciySag. 

>C*e 'tX^SSklr Jr*!*® 

Tunis H»d Happlira 

FOR SALE, ELECTRIC FLY MO 
real mower, $100 or neereat otter. 

Jj»7*N._" 

Topsoil. Rocks ami Fill 

WANT OOUBLI BEDROOM 
»ulH. atoo dimna *ulto tor newer 
aeerWnanf. in-Tfm. , 

ate. 2 j';y:'kJ: j*.* Hwa 


11* uvwitNH sippur.iii m 

AND KVtKft |-<- 
WE ABE SELLING EVERY-1 

» ausjvsa sk 

Harr^Hlm Itcketo Sift \* I 
LadteS' DrNCtWi Fte 12-1*. -Men-x 
jacket. tii* 30. men'* breach#* 
sl/e 30 32. Herd k*t*. Hm **.7 
Two Mir * ledte* and om pair of 

maAi PiAiMfl NlAft 44 a 


* pair 

!•& 


"°aj*« wc Mjw.^ ^aatlSTSBd im.WS 

on City Book Exchange. *33 Fort ; y#r(H tQr ^ 14 yar<to | 
Number J topaol^ jS^vard. 

I WANTED: SIDEWALKBICYCLE 

and mad tum nzt dog houfct. 


& 

St 


GLASS SHADES, BRA^ 

f i xturos nwM to restore. 19» 
nouaa. S9s376r __ 


_,___El 

CLE | Pi ckup . $9 y ard. 4 7B-3322.___ u _ 

CELLENT SCR 
l. Cedar Hill 

a Si par yard. 


EXCELLENT SCREENED TOP 
- v • Hill and McKenna 
area SI oar yard, dailyary antra. 
477-60*4. 7 o.m.-S P.m.; attar 5 
pm. 470-1510. 


PENNY ARCADfc'. OLD PINBALL 

or amusement machine* wanted. 
595-4769._ 


NICKELODEON OR OTHER OLD 

coin operated mualc machine 
* anted 5554769._ 


123 TO 150 AMP FPE ENTRANCE 
service bon. 479-7334. 


USED TOASTER OVEN, OOOD 
condition. 502-2130. 

WANTED: WOODWORKING 
heater to fit flraolaca. SOS-7737. 


oood worklngj 

SELL OLD BOUSt 
-■ op, 192-1 


aMt 1 

OLD. PQBTCAlDSj,.. THIMBLES 


n 

iforma . 

T o* id** dr 471 - 050 * Sunday, lUottoiv 
SCREENED TOP- 1 and even I np*__ 

ATTENTtON DONKEY FRIENDS' 
*450 Rocky Point Donkey Breed)™ 

7 arm, Mete noun victoria. See 
our 2 nerd* ol Docile, imooritd 
purebred. Sicilian miniatures and 
American ipotted Harnnv donkeys 
Home tor *ala). ~ 
p.m -5 or ohc 
not mowi ng 

TOP QUALITY SHREDDED TOP' C.E.F.'HORSE SHOW. SEPT.14. 
soil, mixed with sand and manure, i and 17, Western, English and drlv- 
10-14 yard toads. 51.75 par yard, ting Royelta |qu**trlan Centre. I 
Smaller amounts available. Penm-Mlll Bay. Entries close Saot. 11. | 
sola Bulldozing. 479-I 9B6. _i Phone - 743-1921 . _ • 

DON'T BE DISAPPOINTED. TRy|i 1M 3" PONY^ REASONABLE TO 
our shredded black yirqin aoli. itoioood home Suitable for S-yaar-oid 
weed fredand «xc#llent t«r lawn* child Also boardlrw available, 
and gardens. 3*3-1530 anytime. ! Reasonable in exchange tor Mm* 

BEST SHREDDED lUCK^ -- 

4 yds.. *42, 7 yds., *43; Baq S 2 . JOHN MacNTJTT 

No. I clean. Week loam, easy to TRi’nTTMr. 

spread. 14 yds. $115. 59M129. TKUUUNLx 


IPOTTfg n*THfB» WR 1 RB 

rsi .%;,yxru 

t at Saamchton Fair). 


I .KANE. M UK I I A 

ENSIGN 
Will Show 
-YOU- 
HowTo 
LEASE 


TAR* FlHt AAI.F. IRt CAM FOR BAIT 


AND SAVE!! 

ide alease iiccrifAnc 

Member of Chrvsle? U3lU LAKj 


YOU CAN B. MADSEN 
JM MOTORS 

! 2M1 SOOKE 479-9011 

jflr T*(*HEVYNOVA 

ff v 4 **• um 

T H R E E A v. «* «?«*?■ -- 

POINT 

vV MOTORS ,j 

FOR GOOD 


IM CARA FOR BALE 


SMALL ORDERS ■ ■. . 

WANTED, Sand, gravel, drain and crushed i i7 , 
*52-299*. rock, 1 To * verd loads, *5»-540*. i 1"**2L 


, Member of Chrysler 
I 47 ^j»ge or small LOAgs iw< j Leasin g Sys tems 

MILKING 


OVER 30 

TO CHOOSE FROM 
ALL PRICE TAGGED 

FROM '77 TO '64 

FOR GOOD CLEAN 
TRUCKS 
AND CARS 


yard. 4 7*-7030 or 4 


FRIDGES AND FREEZERS 

b ought. 590-7422. All-tfmp. __ 

CANNING SEALER MACM»N?.i^o“ 1 DAR _. jr . . 

477-141*. loam, all site order*. 

- 1 1/9-15*2. 


agtfial ssl SSWR «t-ai:, 

‘ Open 7 devt e week. 

OU ALIT Y TOPSOIL *9 PER 
verd delivered t#J^ p id cup St per 


_.J term- - 

one ot them. 479-36*5 


PUREBRED ALPINE DOE 
3 months. Grandme. a star milker 
mother avaraoinq • lb*, over 3 1 
mo nth* aa f irst traah e nar. 7 43-2605 |< 

TB GELDING 1*2 


LEASE 

RETURNS 


AIUCEUANOUS 
TO RENT 


TYPEWRITERS 
Student rentals, manual 

month. $25 for 3 months, ....... 

$25 par month. City OHIc* Equto-' H arlEQUIN 


CMl^TT.SriJWL'X ■ 75 Dodge D100 

* p,m or 74M)210. _iPick-Up, V -8 t U t O m R t i C. 

I REGISTERED THOROUGHBRED 1 radio 
mare baauflfui mover, fW c»i i, ppiiT t‘KWS 
breeding, sate on roads, experi-! 5>ALL PK 1 LL 
enced rTder. Joanne. 479-1929 


DOG 1 
classes 


_ _ 1 j | |^y is 2 H H , f ^ wvvw 

TRAIN'KO I Excellent -| *dl^ hunter.' Drewaqe i v « all i oma tic nower *tP«r- *pt-rty whlt« Austin! $.1,195 
as including lend iumoine. Does well In shows >■» auiomauc. ptwer xir«i v 

s*pT. S£d disposition 3*3-73*2._ ingt pow«r brakes. iaptor>’ 76 Mercedes 300D 

ts Anglican u,i MT cn <„n.r _.._i__i-i 


75 Cordobo 


77 Thunderbird 

1 White with burgundy vinyl 
roof and Interior. Air condi¬ 
tioning. stereo radio, power 
windows, radial tire*. Only 
8.500 miles! $7495 

77 Dotsun 710 

Red tour-door with white 
vinyl roof. Automatic. AM* 
FM radio. Only 8,000 mile*! 

77 Mini 1000 *'** 

Only 10,500 mile* on this 


PRICED TO SELL 

P'Va^T&TmSV as LTD* 20 * 
Hours 3*54)122) 
LOW MILEAGE 

1973 Chevrolet impale. 2 dee 
hardtop, radio, tilt stearin* wheel 
tested till '79. *«,00« mllealn baeu- 
Mful condltian. Car* only tiew 
bain* twa split* in the dash, 
caused bv hast expansion Was 
older coupla's second car. Asking 
*2.200 . 59*1715. 


f40 'fS^V**' m#ch !£t* 


C lub. __ 

puppy’ class, start* 

12th at St Dunstan's Anal.... 
Hail in Gordon Hepcf The 


, CENIRE 
domestic ana 

"“"ar,*. * .. 

-- -V T I Juan and 

CAMOSUN FURNITURE RENTAL tion is at . ... 

MONTH TO MONTH matton phone 479-2272. 

Place or Group 

942 Fort SL_ 3*3-345 5 


Cnurch 
hall is 

tton n is*aT 7 p.m" For7urth*f"Tnfpr-1 -Bonnie, 3*2 -1245 after I. 


Jli 


SWAPS 


4 BEDROOM 
HOME 

Will take car (large or small). 
- -what have you? 


NAVY 

«r brake.; i.(.ior> /b Mercedes JUUU X £?£'££'2 ZZ.tn.:, 

.. . ..... ^ . WANTED air. cruise control, power Our most popular model gary «?w at 3W-7722. yates 

located et the corner of San i Horse to lease or buy for eduit 11 j r .j AU _ /-wi.. i? rnn _n_.n,, AUTO SALES LTD . 930 Yates. 

rto TvndaH Aw**. Ragis|ra- rider ^good^stabia*. Phone window’s Only 17,500 mile*. Immacu-j pmutoA, ___ 

' u ,1iC SALE PRICE S5495 


METRO 

HONDA 


78 

HONDAS 

FROM 

Vancouver 

Island's 

LEADING 

HONDA 

DEALER 

Next to the 
ARENA 

388-6921 

OPEN 

9 A M. - 10 P.M. 
2151 Blanshard 

BETWEEN HOLY ROOD 
HOUSE 

AND MEMORIAL ARENA 


IM CARR FOR RALF. _ 

You Can Expect 

f\ Great Deal 

From . . . 


! IM CARA FOR BALE 




SOONER 


OR 


LATER 

You're Going To 
Buy From 

CORNELL GM 


'DEFLATION 

SPECIALS" 


TOYOTA 


FEATURE 

VALUE 


77 VENTURA 

Hr. M>. V« tl'K. p »Mlo. 

vinyl roof. Only 15,S)0 ml. R«r 

$5190 

THIS WEEK ONLY 

$4695 

with full power train warranty for 
112 mo*, or 12,000 mi. 

78 COROLLA 

/ dr. sdn., aule., radio. Balance of 
! factory warranty. 14.344 KM. $4591 

78 PHOENIX 

j 4-dr . V-4 auto. P.S., 24,900 KM . 
I $5*9| 

78 DATSUN 510 

itchback, I »od, tap*, mag 
heels $5*95 

78 CAMARO 

F-I.r P.», 


PEMBROKE DOG 
School classas 
Wednesday, September 

traiion .. | 

View 
478 *420 


PUREBRED SHETLAND PONY, 


late and priced $5,000 less 55 s , l ver grey chevy 
than reo la cement cost! VSL 


Dealer Uc. D.01627A 


A| | 


OBEDIENCE very good netured and does every 7C Plv/mmith Purv _, E _ _ 

tummencinq thing, rack oetlonal. Evening* >0 rlymOUTn TUry 116.8T3 ,»«*! at *3995. 

__*r 13. Rtgis 3 e 5 -ft* 4 . _Station wagon. V-8 automat- -jc rVitc. .m 710 1 3*349*1 wlar I a.i_ 

fLiJ 1 S 7 ,0 ’o WANTED - USED WESTERN j c , power steering, power l 7 , s i Ur V .. W ^IMMACULATE ms MUSTAHG, 

Royal, 7 o.m. 479-5379 Sadd)e for i*.y*ar old gin Raason * Only 6,500 mile* on this w automatic, whita with Wu* 

,. iajl!«.fW! brakes, radio „»Ue.a white Bwvdoor au- *!w'. * TV - 


STOCK NO. »> ? jB 


-I 


_ able price. 


BIRDS F 0 « SALE. ZE»RA p N | N G STAR STABLES. SALE PRICE $3785 


wtwl- a*i3D&»3£US 76 Dodge Colt 

as down Pfvmant on this ♦•oU'Y|s 4 .5 pair, S9*-77». WANTED: THOROUGHBRED „J* , ovhn H-,- 4 

home. Aakinq $46,900 for houM.i - - type. 1& h and ovgr. 100 pet., Matl«1 W'Bgon, 4 cylindei, * 

Phone J9S-5341._ . | COMFQRM ATION _H^ANDUN^G soyjyj. *52-99*7. alter 7 P.m. 

WILL TAKE OUTBOARD MOTOR, 
long shaft SeaguM Silver Century 

KsjsxwjawS 


FAIRFIELD^TRI-PLEX GROSSES 


_speed, radio, roof rack 

•need*handler*"it'arting'VuVsSdy, IWANTE O : SINGLE HORSE SALE PRICE $3696 
September 12th. 479-5329, 479-2272. I her ness end two-wheeled cart. 

^VWg i^ oc^ic a^rfVM Q ii 

E oed. shots. Pedigree on re-, dressege saddle, new. 456-6437 eve- 
f. 479-0160. _I nlnqs.___ 


$10,009.' ’ A**dng 4*5,000. Con»ld#r [GERMAN SHORT -- - lCi 

motor home or luxury auto as part pointers, ready to 00 Saotambar mg. Trained Western end Engllah. 
nownpay mant. 3*5-im. _(3rd. Deposit will hold. 47»-*0»5 *»■ 3W- 7I07._ 

PRIVATE LOT, WITH OR WITH- -| -UHISESHOEINO AND TRIM^ 

out mobile home. Cash, trad*. PUPPIES FOR SALE. POMPANO mlng Phone Ernie Dale. 4794570 

terms. 312-5034 anytime. __ I Kennels, reo'd. Ou*!|ty 

WILL TAKE ‘ Ti *"“ AalwurtjWja# 


house 


POMPANO mlng 
/ white min- anyfli 

— TZ I ieiura f»oodle pupole*. Registered 
TRAILER AS _ *,^ 00 ^ arvJ shots $150 end * 

1 Tier*,". w.1 • HtW TO WTT- “ 

Lanaford area. 474-13*9 


IMPRESSIVE GREY GELDING. « 
years 16.1 HH. Excellent form 
over fences. St450. (112) S74-*0*0 
CAT LOVeRS ONLY, WHO WILLIE- 


76 Plymouth Volore 

Sedan, 6 cylinder automatic, 
power steering, 
brakes, radio 
SALE PRICE $4295 


to appreci ate. $ 

7*6* METEOR STATION WAGON. 

fias"w«refaB li tiers 

p.m. 


74 STATION WAGON VOLKS- 
*aeen. 412 motor. 3740C[ mlI m. au¬ 
tomatic. excellent condition. $3,000. 
3*2-751* 


jtay ment f • i ^^ 7 ^'J2* | Please call 754 -5***, Neneimo * : 1 HH . «Kcellent_ torm 


hr 


HAVE YOU FOR A LOT oeopt afttout discrlmlnetion as to * YEAR OLD GELDING. REA-' 
rone City? 3M-5734. , fXr se^ eqi ^ length of coal. wne«>ie^ erica for good home , 

-W -1 call Greeter Vlclorl* AMmei'* 1 112-74J41IB.__ 

an( f ST\MI's Crusaders. 3*64*32._WANTED - I N B XP E N S I V E 

__ ___ ONE BORDER COLLIE. I SMALL horses for inexperienced riders ' 

THE ULTIMATE INVESTMENT. Labrador I Chihuahua. 1 Oober- 479 - 59 H,_ 

gold, write for free brochure in- men. 1 !smell P^ebred fivi 162 HANDS THOROUGHBRED, 

troducirvg 197 * Canadian Goto qilsh Pointer. : trained^ hunter, kit- ,, vt<lr4 nice mover. Offers ( 

Beaver (Proof) One Troy ounce of tens, ell colour*. <79-S***.___ 3 **- 4 M 9 after * g.m. 

?v r fc 4 g |, 'Gi iJjy.'T.oTjs; .» 6 *g' 2 aL ^k k r?. ^nr5iKoCb~««Dt* 

<334 Postal Depot C. Victoria. B C. ported' SFaSTSS. 'v*U\?y 

vpp >L4 - _Cali collect. Shawntgen 

WANTED: CANADIAN SILVER 743-5974. 

i oint, 19*6 and bef< ' 


TOM Cl NO 
- SELLS 
PREMIUM 
EX LEASE CARS 


MERCURY mamauder. 
Duckets, consol*. 429 cu In. 
barrel cerb. otters. 


■tore. Also u.S. 


Lake. 18 MONTHS SAANEN DOE. $55 
__ 47*-9201. 

^ aaftaK** - 

FOUR STRIPS OF 13 STAMPS, i?*-^_» 8 WN™ OLD STEER. *300 

nferi 1 ITaninSVlrSi LASSIE COLLIE GERMAN SHE?- - 

ttr'e. OJOtfars. R#PMf t° vicso- hff(J cr#M oupples Parents WEANER PIGS, HAY *2 BALE 
n* Prats, Box **7__ ourC brad, S35. Sheoh*rd-Lab pups 47 S- 5 IS 3 . 


WANTEDI BULK SILVER, CANA- tree^4*4-3117._■_. 

ajk auTaajr’ ^h-mkn. 


117 ARTS and ANTIQUES 


1 male. Black and tan. $250. 3*4-6407 
for inquiries. 


and MACHINERY 


-— GREAT PYRANESE PUP. 7 

OPEN SAT. SUN ANO AAON YES | w^ak old bitch, smokev and whita 
all the holiday weekend. 10 til 8 colourlnq responds to training, 


the holiday weekend. 10 hi 8 colourinq 
p.m. Why buy pressboard and I $i». 47J-I942. 
sawdust when you can inveat In; 

-lood wood furnishing at Pate'S 
Piece. The store tor everybody. 

Vic Ionian Linen press. $395; ward 
roses from 199.95 ; 3 piece inlaid 
mahogany bedroom suite, $399.95; 
draw-leaf tables plus 4 cheirs. for 
only *299 95. One only monastery 
table with 6 chairs, $395; Victorian 
frame print*, from $14.95 Plus 
many other miscellaneous Items, 
china ate. Chargex and Mas 
tercharqe. Pelt s Piece, 7*6 Gold- 
sfream, 47* *000. 


PUREBRED GERm'S^B. 
herd puppies, 9 week* old, $75. 

4S2-1444._ « ■ 

BUYING A PUPPY? CALL VIC. 
tori* City Kennel Club ^Watch- 
dog ' for advice. 3*5-2233. 


SILVER MINIATURE POODLES. 
8 weeks old- registered, shots, 
partly trained, melt. 479-0*03 


Efficient, durable. Category l 
3 point hitch 

Complete line of implements 
MAYDON POODLE VILLA Parts and service 
Reg d miniature ooodles, adults or 
puppies. 112-743-2493. 


GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS, 
nicely marked, unregistered 
Males, $7 5, Hm alea $40 471-3132 

CHI MO DOG. OBEDIENCE 



nwn 

TMCTMS 


ENSIGN 
LEASE LTD. 

Quadra At 
Caledonia 

Dealer licence number 
D548B * 

386-2411 
Open Weekdays 
Till 9:00 

149 NEW CAR DIRECTORY , 

72 Colt 


lomatie. Radial time. $4,395 

76 Dotsun 710 

Metallio green two-door with 
brown vinyl roof. Four- 
s[ eed, tach.. and radio. 

$3,995 

75 Valiant 

Light blue four-door auto- 
P 0 "'* 1, matic power rteering, power 
brakes, radio. Only 27,000 
mile*. $3,495 

75 Vega Wagon 

Beige, radial tires, only 
27.000 miles. $2,495 

74 Maverick 

Two-door, automatic. Vinyl 
roof, radial*, radio. 

74 Mazda 

Pickuo and Canopy $2,295 i**5 sarrecwd#Ti7fv«a > 

— . -. nomical. runs ««ll, $800 

74 Pinto - 


METRO 
HO IV DA 


Wille Motors 

GREAT 


78 CHEV 

PI., PS, 
$6195 

78 COUGAR 

? dr. ht Bucket saats. convxl#. 
vinyl roof. • $**95 

77 PINTO 

7-dr. auto . 14,000 ml. . $3*95 

77 VOLARE 

In- 4 dr HT., * CVl.. PS, PS. 24495 

Km. $4991 


73 GMC VAN 
"DESERT RAT" 

Completely customized 
dudes V-8 auto., P.S.. P.B. 
radio, C-B. police scanner,; 177 FIREBIRD 
cabinet bar. sriffeo AM-FM, | Vi #ul0 Radio, P.S. and brakes, 
tape deck, air shocks, mags, 0f1, v ,4 '°°° 


tires, plus Lrt’ Rat trailer. 
Estimated value $11,400. 
M0»t be seen. 

•‘Deflation Special’* $9555 


SELECTION ST0CKN0 825MA 

IIVJIN 75 0 bl,ca 


brekes, tires 
nice. $400 or * 


’{jag* 

res end cl 


clutch 


W pell 
i. inter i 


M, 


4722, daytime, 479 - 


O’ 


*74 MALiau classic sedan, —.. ■»■ I a gnecri radio rear 

l-cviinder euto. Power staerln^ J] CheV Townsman ulit, 

pov/tr Drakes, tut steering, vary 

go od conditio n, 3KL5210._^ 

1953 PLYMOUtH, EXCELLENT 


'76 BRONCO 


76 ASPEN 

4 dr. VI auto. Radio 


$3995 


Station Wagon 

»Au9aV4.P.I.P ... bStf? . fUt5 

71 Dodge Charger 


Runabout, 4-speed, radial*, 
radio. $1,995 

73 Dotsun 610 __ imiw „. ITV 

m _ a _ i -.ji.u GOING BACK TO UNIVERSITY. 

Wagon. 4-speed, radius. Vust ^ my e,nto automatic 
radio $2 995 flx.ctMient condiiion, iu*t ta*ted. 

73 Pont ioc 


. _ - - _ 1944 FORD FALCON 2-DOOR 

Lemans Coupe, automatic, I tiry, ^•J^t^idi! 
sport wheels, radial*, i $ 200 . 3 * 5 ^ 42 * 1 . 
raaio. 

■73 Toyota 


defog. '75 LANDCRUISER 

E-r. Wue wttt, whKe vinyl j 

Exodlent ccmditirm. .74 MARK II 

Deflation Special CTO , . , e ^. rM>o 

- 40,00* mi. $3995 

___ STOCK NO. C304A 1 , 7a T ovATA 

SfS " ''•* " 5 ' • <5aTv ««5 7> Chevelle Malibu HILUX 7 *. nht 

n smc >. im*vI ciu d V "* “*? • 

72 COURIER Pickup 4-sp. $i*»5 P.S., P B., radio, near de- 

»2 DATSUN Pickup 4-sp. *1595 m \ r wine in colour 3 

75 FORD V| ton custom *3295 1 ‘°Fg«r. air. wue in colour 

75 aaazda Pickup ion with can “Deflation Special $4<j6 

” HIGH PERFORMANC E 174 GMC Pickup SS , “77^ a ^2 COROLLA 

4* GaUxle 500 Fasfback. 390 GT, iSTOCK NO. 83765A 7 -dr sdn. 4 sod Radio. 31.000 ml 

extra*. Must sell. Offers 384-80M VANS AND MOTOR HOMES 77 rmcmnn *2*tj 

“ 4:30. 1 74 WINNEBAGO 19' Brave 512.730 77 F REB RD 

‘/I SECURITY 27' M-Home $20,175,/' L « c » n _ 

75 security 30Vi' AMHoma V-8 auto., P.S.. P R . ramo 
sufso 23.000 miles, white In colour. I 
NEW security campers Excellent condition. 

l«_ p T Deflation Special ’ 


74 SATELLITE 


; offer. 479-47*5. 


16495 


SAUNDERS AND 
HITCHMAN LTD 
2040 Cadccro Ba/ Road 
at Fort and Foul lev 
Dealer Licence D01751A 


$2,293 47 PLYMOUTH, NEW RADIATOR 
end hoses, radial tirev n*w 
shocks, tuna ue tested till v9.14» 
*56-420*. 


STOP IN TODAY 

PAUL SMITH? S% BUPC-ESS 
3240 Douglas at Clovaroai* 


14—30 H.P. Diesel treckars. For 
term, garden end industrial im. 
We specialize In 4-wheel drlva. a 
models to choose from. 



$2,495 


$1,895 


ESTATE an 
ANTIQUE AUCTION 

TUES. OCT. 3. 7 P.M. 
ind. In part Gao and Vlct fur 

rnshings, East Asian and Oriental .._ _I . 

'arpets. Canadian and Eurooaan class*t starting September win 
Paintings, silver. Porcelains, near Hillside Centre. 479 - 2 t 79 . 
Clocks, Estate Jewelry. For an ap BH . 7 ———r . V S J 

uraisai of your Hams please phone AUT . * « 2 LuhS E tel 

John Bov la at LUNDS Auclionavs tH coutoehephard, aval llabto to 
3 gjj. 33 Qg loving noma, tall 477-02*0 after 5. • 

FARM HOUSE TYPE FLUFPV 1 
g^nj^O kittens, also, other colours 


Financing available 

IRON MORSE EQUIPMENT LTD. 
5*50 Trans Canada Hwy. 

4 milts south of Duncan 
Open * days 0-4 


Dodge four-door 

72 Valiant 

Automatic, radio $1,595 

71 Buick 

One-owner Lesabra 2-dr 
hardtop. Automatic, power 
steering, power brakes, radio 
$1,995 

71 Mazda 

Four-door, automatic $1,395 

70 Toyota 
Corona MK II 

Foutvdoor, automatic $1 395 


I evenings only. 


DESKS 

Regency Inlaid mahogany drop _____ __I_ I 

front. Jlctorl*n mahogany Couole j fpiENDLY PUREBRED 2 YEAR 
oedeslal Canadiana carved oak old soavad famala Doberman, $75. 
)rop front. Small roll top secre 1 477-1691 
-1— - 10t . - 


fary. Harrison Antigua*. 101* Fort 
St.. 3*3-7553. 


ANTIQUES - COLLECTABLES) j. 

unlimited, emono tint estate fur- i - , .. _ 

nlshlng* we are featuring the most AFFECTIONATE 3-MONTH-OLD 
iuparb oriental rugs, oil paintings, tamale/ kitten to good 
and West Coast Indian art, Klee- 474-1*03^ 
wvck Antiques, 5269 Sook* Rd. 

Open 7 days a weak. 


4 MONTH OLD MALE _ 

Free to good home. 594-1119 attar 


PUPPY. 


WHALE'S TEETH, SCRIMSHAW, 
Narwhal Tusk, Whallnq and Nau¬ 
tical Antiques wanted by collector. 

k. h. Weys, — ■ r -— * 

Gierdaie. Call 


175* Rohr Street, 


HlrtHiST PRICES PAID FOR 
quality antique furniture “ 


MOVING. FREE MALAMUTE 
dog to good home, please help. 

4&1J74;_ 

6-TOED KITTEN, RAISEO WITH 
dog. tor the indoors. Will deliver. 
112-743-4094. 


AFFECTIONATE B 


rugs, 'docks,'p*lntlr>QS. etc. IVlS, aft •r'l" 

Robinson Ltd.. 101* Fort, 114-6425. 


URMESE 
loving he 


MP 

Massey Ferguson 


New and Uaed.Farm, industrial 
and Garden Equipment 

I moiements—Parts—Barvlca 

Spacils on soma MF tractors 
Until Oct. 22. 197* 
Financing Available 

IRON HORS= EQUIPMENT LTD. 
5*5* Trans Canada Hwy. 

4 miles south of Duncan 
Open * day* 8-4 
741-2*09 


McCttium Motors Ltd. 

DOWNTOWN 

1101 Yates ot Cook™™” 

3*2-4122 Dir. Loc. 0085A 0/ INOVO 

COL WOOD Four-door automatic 

; 1856 Island H'way 60 Vouxhall 
i IF 94.5% OF NEW •’ 9 • 0Ul, m,le, 
VOLVO OWNERS 
I WERE SATISFIED, 

WHY BUY 
ANYTHING LESS? 

burfev conducted emong owners 
of new cers registered between 
July and Saot. 1977. Results avaiu 


$1,095 


1971 HONDA ACCORD, S^SPEED, 

dark brawn, 4 I * 
ter*. (7500 mi 
firm. JU-r ‘ 


miles). As new. *4400 


1956 LINCOLN MK II 
Tht* cer wet driven by the Gove 
nor of Tenet, black, rad Intorlo 
air. $204)00. 592-2217. 


1967 MUSTANG 
One owner, vary dean, V-* auto¬ 
matic, $2100. 592-7217. 


*9 BLUE 

:nsL « 


FORD FAIRLANE. 
>d condition. $500. 


ansis*- 


1975 SUPER BEETLG 
qranda. sun roof, 34400 i 
52.500. 995-0307. 


or 592-0524. 


$495 


1944 PONTIAC, REBUILT 213. RE 
cent IV tested. $400 or offers. 

. ->62-59)2. _ 


’67 COUGAR, 2*9, NEW -PAINT 
And extras. Asking $JD0 743-43*0 

or 479 - 37)1 


Government 

at 

Hillside 

385-6737 


A-T 

74 AUSTIN Marina 

1974 SUPER PINTO AUTOMATIC, 72 DODGE Polar! 
lady driven. 29,000 mW $2.2*5. 72 RENAULT. A-T 
173 VEGA SW 


PUMLEY 



BRAND N€W 
78 MINIS, 
ONLY $3625 


76 TOYOTA COROLLA SW., 

A-T $3695 

74 AUSTIN Marina A-T $1695 STOCK NO. C304A 


STOCK NO. 83493A 

77 HONDA Wagon 

C1 v 1 e , special model. 
4-*peed. radio, rear defog- 
per, roof racks, green in co¬ 
lour. 

“Deflation Special” $4385 
STOCK NO. 83763A 

77 Pontiac LeMans 

Sport* Coupe. V-8 auto., 
P.S., P.B., radio AM-FM 
Tilt wheel, Wue in colour. 
“Deflation Special” J649J 

STOCK NO. 834500 

76 NOVA 

6-ryt, aulo.. P.S. P.B.. 
radio, stiver in colour. Ex- 
I cellent condition 
“Deflation Special” 


592-24/1 

Open Weekdays 'til 9 



Dl 

Itoyota 


EZE-OWN 


v LINCOLN with every 
$419o conceivebl* option Incl. moon roof. 
Just as new. 

SALE PRICE $1*.*Q0 


75 dodg dart 4rDR. 77 Chevelle 2-Dr. 


j92-*5*6. 


6 * AUSTIN 1*00. 


MILES, 


H- TOP QUALITY REGISTERED 749-4501. 


truck 

$4,500 

749-650 


Detroit Diesel motor on 
conweyors. Asking 
Phone after 4 p.m.: 


1*97 PRINTING PRESS, ^ wlek^to* KENWORTH LOGGER, NICE 

tr#»die sewing mechlne, st. Mar- 3IM*1 * after a a n o weea doa*._ rktoojlt 335/ ^ rubbtr 0Q 

naret's^SchcwL Tuesday-Frldav, 9-3; q g q j E R E D MINIATURE Irjfek^ wWh older Pag# tralto?! 


IM CA BS FOR SALE {_ 

1974 TRANS AM 4M. SILVER ! J/AJ ’.VjL'lx-■ k m 
white interior, eutomatlc. power i 

Steering, power brakes, radio and 

SSJSi',, ““ " 4 - ,0M ‘ SILST’^SB 

---trunk, air conditioning, 445 cu. In 

1974 PLYMOUTH FURY III * angina. A-l condition; must Mil, 
sedan, VI, automatic, power owner leaving town. 47I-240C. 

ina. power brekM. radio,- 

tires, beloe-brown vinyl roof, 
litlon. $2795. 3*4-9002. 


.. TOUCl. 

Lov«lv 1906 Circa oak phone booth. I i OVELY LITTLE SEAL POINT 
tor Photos and viewing. Phone sierr^M kittens. IwMk* old, litter 
trained, S25 each. 452 13*1. 


r-Frlday, *4 REGISTERED MINIATURE 
white poodles, good lamparmant, 
partially -trained. $150, 478-5344 


FIMEC OVERHEAD PANEL 
Sander. 4" belts, commercial use 

For i- - 

5950*79. 


I o UYII#( WWf!11f»R1\,ID1 Wff 

more Information call 


AUTHENTIC CHINESE EGG POT KITTEN, viliTAPRlCTIONATl --- — ^- 
22*' !♦" I'WT'' IF diamatar. lovely tamale tebbv, 3 montha, will of ea*t iron. F 

**2-1*90. I deliver. 477 * 341. 595-41*3. information, cell 3*5^9*0. 


iove'V remate laooy. j rnor 
deli ver, 477 -I341, 595-41*3. 

AN- j LCVING HOME 

I week Ok - 

479-4415. 


IRON 


IOME FOR 4 SEVEN OERLINGER p ORKLIPE 1*4)00 
kltt^t*. Some wnfie. 


120 GARDEN 8UPPUEN 


I THREE LOVELY HAMSTERS 
I with compiet* separate cedes. 
477 *591. 


Excellent condition. $2795 . 

SACRIFICE, 1974 GREMLIN, 
49,000 miles. Standard, radio. Test- 


MUST SELL THIS WZEKEND, 
19*9 VW stattonwegon, 1 «po »t 
dard, tested, $995 or first 
able offer, 3*6-01*0 


MOOI L 410 BOBCAT, UNDER MJ 


.. motor, excellent condition, $40. 
thru-out. $430 firm. 442-32*1 after * 

o.m. 


IW DOG HI 
l. 477-2034. 


FfrtllUcrr 


No Sunday call*. elatM. 


KITTENS TO 
Free 3*2-9034. 


A GOOD HOME 


1974 FIAT 124 SPECIAL TC. 4 
door sedan clean, one owner, low 
mlfbege. excellent condition. Ask- 
Ing *2,490. 477-3*64. _ 

'49 CHEV. IMP ALA 2 DOOR 
hardtop, power steering, power 
brakes, excellent condition. Otters. 
112- 7 4*-*220. .__ 

NICE CLEAN *47 PONTI 
wagon, 2*3 auto, new tires, 
tery needs engine work, 
595-4794. 


OLDSMOBILE 
1972 Delta Roy 
In 

ml__ 


Luxurious .... 
hardtop, gold 
cream Inttrior, 47,00 
V4, power steering, 


EXCELLI 
l Quad* t 


condition. Carter duel I 
Edelbrock manifold, new neaoer 
and dual axhaust. mags, tape dac 
and many axtras, $3,100. 479 - 9)4 
attar 6 p.m. _ 




'65 MALIBU SS 2-DR. » 

Turbo 460 auto., *hM* kit, . 
tac, buckat Mats, powar windows, 
radio, rally wttaala. tested GAR¬ 
DEN CITY AUTO SALES LTD., 
2970 Dou glo> 302-9111. P40310A. 

74 FORD 4-DOOR HARDTOP 
power steering, power brek«s, 
trailer hitch, air thorkt. naw 
brakes, naw fires, good condition, 
12300. 476-2015. 


i FREE KITTENS. FREE DELI- j ^ ^ABM D1PLEMENT9 

“SAANWOOO FARMS LTD. I V - Y ' .. ™’}* T --- HABITAT^ 

CO., manurt..tn-MM or | WH.TC COCKATItl 

471-0*11 DL-007IA 


•74 PINTQ STALLION, UNIQUE, f t l2J i» CA c!egar V m*gs ; , 

silvar-black, hatch, maos, ate. One /IKS' hX much 

%’ZT 22 T- SSi SR: .fiSSiltKifcTSfc 

’49 


cage. 478-347A 


FROM SWAN LAKE FARM. OLD .WANTED: LARGE DOG 
_menurr jx) sawdu5t_ ^4 yd ^ 1 Ing m»tal cages. * 52 - 3704 . 


SUM 


TRAVEL 


192) 14 yd*. $99; 


SSri y# A r!s MS S42 LT deilvte’*?l PE0,STE " AFGHAN PUPPIES,! 
m . 5 n .*d .5 • v-ro * oeiivereo. . tuniii 477 -MJe 


Allis-Chalmers 20 HP Urclor w*t*i' P^. 

I COCKER SPANIEL, J jMONTHS < ^h^cultlySor “'ax' 

I old. blond male. $150 .474-2439. j Slcn^SSSMonT cw,,,v * tor ' •** 


FIREBIRD 427 CHEV M21 
‘ sit po*i., needs work. 
3*3-4475 between 44 


REB 

BU, 12 k 

firm. 


% firoenhouhos 

POUR. i-WEEK-OLD KITTENS 
Fret to oood homo. 392-1957. 

B.C. GREENHOUSE builders 
D uality aluminum and glass green 
htuili. For information— 

nrochures. writ# 7*3 Hutchinson 
A vo. or phono 3*5-2141. 

Pli/REBRED ST. BERNARD PUP 

nies tor sale Call after 5, 474 7697 

PUPPIES FOR SAVE. CALL: 
3*9-5474 after 5 p.m 

Plowinit, Rotovntllg 
xml OaltlenttBC 

122 CHICKS, POULTRY 
HATCHING EGGS 
SUPPLIES 

DON'S TRACTOR SERVICE 

477-3913 

We rotovete, plow cut arete end 
brush ei»o, loading and hauling. 

aSw*-** 

flfflBfllilMB 

178-3143 or 477-5147 

Grass or bruah mowing, rotova* 
>ng, loading, naul ng. tot cleanup. 

Dwwjwr* 

9 BANTAM ROOSTERS, *7 EACH. 
1742 Hovev Road. « 

J3 LAYING HENS, 130. 
479-4144. 

4 BROTHElft^- 1 ALL AREAS 
FKEE ESTIMATES - ANYTIME 
RototlTlIng, naw lawn preparation*, 
etc. Saa our ad under gardening. 

10 CHICKENS STILL LAVING. 
Fro*. 595-1116 after 5. 

FOUR YOUNG FAT NEW MAMP- 
shir* roosters, *3.50 each. 496-4324. 

CHICKENS FOR SALE, 12 AND *3 
each. 479-0541. 

TED^ TRACTOR SERVICE; 

’XSSZrMlX: ^ *■ 

TDS TRACTOR SERVICE-RO- 
'ovetlng, levelling, vegetable gar¬ 
dens and yards. 479-2204. 

•0 HENS PORSALE, SOME LAY- 
Ing. $30 479 2572. 

Tool* and Supplin# 

1 ■!* I l\ 1 stock hi ppijeh 

AND EVENTS 

r 16 |m mower 

Fxcaliant, heavy duty. *215 
A52-3992. 

GOOD PONY FILLY, 19 MONTHS, 
unbroken, offer*. 479-2945, 479-2305. 

_ 1 

'* V • 


point hitch, *3000; Mesaev blade. 
- >M*or born ctoonor 


c 2 wtcfum' 

MASSE Y-FERGUSON GARDEN 

tracer, 14 he. Mydreyllc lift, with 

plane or what hove you?'2*54^90. 


Well Drilling and 
Pump Installation 

Butler Brothers 

Equipment Ltd. 
652-1121 


«W*S 8 

aa ,a * ** w i«"< 

PLYMOUTH, 74 SATELLITE, 

Sabring Plu*. excellent running 3*2-9111, 
New pemt lob. *2700. 


'7* DODGE ROYAL MONACO 
Brougham, 47,000 milts, P.S., 
P.B., P.W., P.L., P.T., *ir cruk 
naw Michtilns. 7-door, black; $53 
or bast offer. 47*4429. 


log 9 

ondttlon 

3*3-3324. 




1972 995 DAVID BROWN TRAC 
tor with front end loader, fp 
i tow a rd roOBvanr, to 
Excellent condition, 
hours, wiN Mil 
evenings. 


W wWP 9 e¥ 

. landscape rake, 
ton. dniv ifOO 
tteretely. 412-5753 


f. J. Grlovo 
m, 652-1442. 


MASSEY FERGUSON 133. 14SS 
hour*, with front-end looder. Lend- 
oe rake end blade. Rototllli 
rbed- Phone 74 *-To* 4 . 


TRACTOR. ALUS CHALMERS. 1* 
n p rototliler, cultivator, 20 gallon 
sprayer. Truck canopy 452-2393. 


lop excellent condition, $3495 or 
beet offer. 47*4935. 


1972 

4940B ..... _ 

ireat condition, dependable, *Tj 


1944 SUNBEAM IMP, 


or ports, i 

Mile, gla 


r& E , 


194* VAUXHALL VICTOR 4-DOOR 
standard, naw clutch^ good, engine, 


rssMMt 


1974 DODGE CHALLENGER, Ex¬ 
cellent condition, now paint, fl- 
nanclng gvo H obte, *3481. 47S4ite *, 

*9 FORD FALCON, AUTOMATIC, 
\ cylinder, tested, low mHexgo, 
now tiro*, bottary, *795. 477-921*. 

74 VEGA HATCHBACK. ONE 

XSh'T.BDtkS —* rA 

*7 VOLKSWAGEN SQUARE- 
back, oood condition In and out, 

479>797S._ 

1957 AUSTIN CAMBRIDGE, RUN- 
nino order, ideal tor student. 31,000 
milts. OS Is $1« 99247*3. 


77 HONOA CIVIC. EXCELLENT 
condition, 900* miles, AM-FM 
stereo cassette, *3495. 575-7131 eve- 


1973 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE, V4 

GSE%jrsBM7 


V4, consol* end buckets, exc< 
ttonal condition, recent iCAA i 
port; best offer. 313-372*. 


tween 16-12 e.m. 




CLEA_ ... 
standard $15 


c ^.' 


1971 FORD PINTO DELUXE. AU- 
»omjMic^49406 mile*. Exceltont. 

I DAFT BFORT. G 
4-berrel. 
r S o.m. 


1971 FIAT 
cor d'J ton, 34, 


MERCEDES 300 SEL 
I. good condition, port 9re 
slderod; 1*500 firm. *52-3430 


1949 MARK III. ABSOLUTELY 
immaculate, silver grey; will a 
cept small trade, 19*00 992-2217 


*9 CORTINA. RECENT ENGINE 
overhaul. Off ars to $900. Phone 
anytime, 471-43*1. 

MUST SELL, 1974 VOLVO, 4 
door, excellent condition, phono 
599-9*92. 

'70 TOYOTA. RUNS WELL, ALSO 

49 Buick $pedei, now motor, 
45*4*04. 

XJr&X 'sum n 

or best offer, 3*3-3527. 75 

'76 RABBIT. 2 DOOR, RADIO. 74 
39^00^^ mil**, ox cel tent, *3695. 

70 MINI SELLING FOR PARTS. {} 
Phono between 10 a.m. • 2 p.m. j) 
793-1139. 7 i 

i 1970 ALPINE, NEW BRAKE* *1 
- and tuna-up, $900 or bast offer. » 7 
595-16*7. 

'72 BEETLE, JU»T . TESTED, W 
- lust painted, mechanically #*• 
l cal tent, $1,200. 992-0471. 74 

, 74 AST RE. POWER STEERING, 73 
. power brekes. ,33.000 miles, ox- 73 
, cellent condition, $2300, 479-7*64. 

TB TORINO, FAfTBACK, ME- n 

: aS C M W )!L,S^ 8 .«. ,lr ! 

’ 1,71 TOYOTA COROLLA 4 DOOR ,‘i 

fSTAioT’ri.m-a .W t 

1 1972 TOYOTA CORONA, ONE ?! 
, owner, only 45,000 miles, very ri 
3 good condition. $1700. 3*4-621*. 7 : 

19*9 PLYMOUTH FURY III. 

3 j^dd^rellebt# trensportehon, $630. 5 

19*7 ANGLIA — FORD - 7 - 
u ? door, ttanderd. many now parti. - 
. offer*, 3*5-25*3. 

4 ‘74 GREMLIN, NEW PAINT, LOW 4 
!2 mileage,, $ 1*00 or bast offer, a 
? 3*3-444*. 

1974 Z29, 350LT1, 400 HIOH DRA- « 
r mafic, in parfect condition, *5500 t 
I! O.B.O., *58-5741 after *. ' 

>• l*4» JAVELIN. LOT» OR 

t aa ufflis znJri-'jn > 

u p.m. , 

. sapSte j 

ff 1971 PLYMOUTH WAOON, GOOO 1 

i vtsmm. 4000 ; 

*■ 1979 SCIROCCO, 11^09 MILES. ’ 
radio. *4200. 4774239. 

^ SlSt T l5, ** 4 **®’ *** ’ 

i? iitwjr i 

f v,,w 1 

4 rc^^N. x .5£ L %L» w,TM 
"■ OS »TA°«i!)n* u ' T 

- LmenJir 

196* CHEV CAPRICE, IN TOP 
Y notch condition, $700 firm. 643-4211. 


V-8 auto., P.S., P.B.. radio, 
air - Blu * tn colour. Ex- 
cpllent condition. 

“Deflation Special” $4796 

$1295 —- 

$ 695 STOCK NO. T188BB 


197* CHEVROLET CAPRICF 
CLASSIC 4-door sedan Adi me 

SALE C pRPcE n $695* V 0flti ° n * 

1976 BRONCO RANGER ‘*4 
Navor off rood. Truly immecuiat* 
“lua and while, aux. tanks, p.s . 
^.b., white mags, w.c. mirrors. 
&ALE PRICE $4450 


Dealer licenced 592 


PAINTER 


txrvrfr. 

• m p.t.. P.i. 


Cruiser wagon 
model, V-8 auto., P.S., P.B. 
radio, roof rack*, buckskin 
in colour. 

“Deflation Special” 

STOCK NO. C403A 

76 CHEVY 
Station Wagon 

V-8 auto., P.S., P.B.. radio, 
roof rack, rear defogger. 

red In colour. Excellent con¬ 
dition. 

“Deflation Special” $4696 

STOCK NO. 338A 

76 MONZA 

[ 6 cyl. auto., P.S., P.B. ra— 
CjSfl****'•' oSient U ocmUU«i. CO ' OUr ** 

joos FINANCING o.a^c «“Deflation Special” $3895 

Aft or hour*: 2M-0122) , _____ 

r O»0 CUSTOM m. Ht -1 yr0CK y - 

76 OHEVFTTC 

m. $279yTaking dailwery of GM** answer to the imports 
Drive the little one home. 


3>VIN Mhl ’ - wwin 

Squtr* is W 

SAlI PRICE «4,*0* 


ELIN SIT, outo. 
ID F-2S0 Crow Cob 


"ECONOMY CARS" 


uSl 

*1995 


motolTic’ maroon with complimen¬ 
tary Inter tor. olr cond. oauges. 

l*7T OATIUN SAOA TRUCK 
Chroma mags, fat redials only 
- ml lee. Replacement cost 


tt^SliSf^ArJ^KS t ‘ spwi ’ r,,Uo ' 1 — 

^.wwr’SwSr: . . *»**• 


CAPRI 2*00 CC 4-SPEED '"DEflation Spedal^” $3095 

grOCK no. 82920B 

76 Dotsun '/ 2 -Ton 


liSI. 


G.S. RIVIERA 


L THE ABOVE CARS MAY BP 
RCHASED WITH 100% BANK 
OANCING O.A.C. 


'65 MUSTANG 

V4 euto . P.S., P i., redto. iw»te 

197* VOLVO 245 OL STATION 
wagon, 4-speod ovordrlv*. tow 
miles, exceltont condition, call 

477.09** efter * p m. 


COLLECTORS ITEM *4 COR 
v*ir Monza, good running condi¬ 
tion, bast offer, 3 * 4-7104 


>LES LTD , 297* Douglas, 3 * 2 - 


1970 BUICK LE SABRE 4 DOOR 

0n " 


D40319A. 


74 DART 


CHRYSLER NEWPORT 


vary good coadIN-, ...... 

SUOO t 4*&73 X< * >#nt thr0U,h0Ut ' 


STOCK NO. R224E 

fnl- 75 Toyota Corolla 

HT, 1200 oc. 4-*peed, radio, 
blue In color. 

“Deflation Special” $2855 


r«ot 


71 FORD LTD BROUGHAM. 

M056; 

*71 DODGE COLT CAROUSEL l 
exc 9 li#nt condition. 479-3099 efior 9 
p.m. 


'71 FORD 
wagon, muat 
3*3-4353. 


STATION 

rs to $600. 


STOCK NO. 7350TTC 

76 Volare 4-Dr. 

V-8 auto., P.S.. P.B., radio, 
silver In colour. Excellent 
condition. 

“Denation Special” $4495 


kCK '73 VEGA ESTATE 
ton . now Amor icon vectors . 1 
t liras, glue much more. 81,430. 


STATION WAGON, 1970 FORD 
Meteor, tow milaooa. vary oood 
condition, lust tested'»!M 0 or bast 
offer. Coll 479-0091 after 4 g.m. 




1975 MONTEGO STATION 
weoen. 34.000 ml to*, *3700 479-1495. 




71 OUSTER, POWER STEERING, 
31* automatic, one owner, Immacu¬ 
late, *2315. 452-20*0 


TWO f* FORDS FOR SALE. 
H 494-5990 


FORD FUTURA. 
3*4-0155. 


*175 


44 PLYMOUTH FURY III, NEW 
brake*, now starter motor, new 
red, redials. 3*44107. 


S 8 &. 


automatic, tMtac 


'71 THUNDERBIRD, 
cgtont^ shape. Must i 


1971 FORD CUSTOM M 

ftRSi. cortdW ‘ on ' 


OVER 150 UNITS 
To Choose From 

GMAC and BANK 
FINANCING AVAILABLE 

CORNELL GM 

CHEV-OLDS LTD. 

3050 Doug la* 38W777 
IV00681A. 


1974 *< 

say 


BOBCAT, J DOOR AUTO- 
. vinyl too, took* now. 11 * 10 , 


19*4 PONTIAC STATION WAGON. 
Very ^ood^transportatlon Tasted 


anrhiriQ’uat 


1999 KARMAN GHIA 


KLS" V *’ 


1977 9-PASSENGER PONTIAC 
3**)T74 W-,0n ' tSW0 


194* VW, '47 REBUILT FNGINJE, 
engine good, body average. *495. 
*54-5991 5924*0* 


^i*»K 
























































































































































































































































































































































































/ 


UP HR!* TO R UAL! 

motoii vtn. \ 


CARS M>R BALE 11AM ( AK^ I'OR «\|i 


liw c ARR hiR SALE 


•l.to CARS TOR EAI.E 



3 ONLY! 

BRAND NEW 

1978 VOLVO 

245 STATIONWAGONS 

ONLY $8398 





Clinic Tested 


2524 Douglas 
383-3635 


YOU CAN 

PUT IT ALL 

To-Gether 


78 Vettes (2) 7 L Mu vt an9 ", 

78 Corolla Liftbock *" l °' mm 

78 Hondo H-B 77 QMC Van 

78 GMC Funcreft lully ckmperUed 

. 20' Motorhome now only su.m> 


ft 

VICTORIA 

DODGE 

ICHRYSLER 


ON YATES 


AT 


YOUR CHOICE 
Automatic, or 4 »r>d with 
overdrive 
Pries* Includes! 
pomwr steering 

- -power brakes 

- radial tires 

- undercoat 
-pre-delivery inspc. 

—freight • 

Special prices in effect toTTT-BIRD 2 dr., V 8 . >.T., 
Saturday, Sept. 2. P.S., P B., P. wind., 

radio. $5695 


SUBURBAN 


i 78 FIESTA 2 dr., 4 spd 


178 Corolla 
1600 S.W. 

78 Land Cruiser 
4X4 

77 Olds 442 
77 Ouster Wgn. 

77 Corolla 2-Dr. 

77 Cougar XR7 
77 Mustang Mach I 


77 Charger Daytona 

Auto.. P.S., P.B. 

Was $6995 NOW $6595 

76 Ford 34-Ton 

CAMPER SPECIAL 

NOW ONLY $5795 

76 Gremlin 

6 cyl. auto., 7,000 miles. 
Was $3895 NOW $2995 

(75 Dodge Van 

ton automatic 


VOLVO TRADES 

73 244 DL auto sedan. Choice 
of two — Burgundy or 
burgundy with silver 
vinyl roof. $5895 


$ 4295 >77 Corolla SR5, 54593 NOW 54095 

77 comet 4 dr . “6”, at., '77 Volare 4-Dr 74 Vega 4-Speed 
L 76 Capri 2.3, A T. 

76 Montego Wgn. 

76 Courier P.U. 

76 Trans AM 
76 Charger 
76 Volare Wgn 
w *»- V- Lli '75 VW Rabbit 
L * V«. '75 Celica ST 

74 TR6 
74 Jeep CJ5 
74 Fiat 124 Conv. 


76 MONTE CARLO 2 dr„ 
lit.. V 8 . A.T., P-S., P.B., 

buckets $5695 

76 MONTEGO \TLLAGER 

P.S. 


74 145 Wagon 4 -spd. dark I 73 PI NTO 2 dr., V 6 , At 
green. Mlchelins, super| S2S95 

condition. $4995 74 yOLKS 9m. Wgn.. 4 spd.. 

72 ilStTSw w maverick crabber 

light green s-«pa., racu ,, ^ AT rt(lin 
all, extra clean. $39% 


2 dr. V 8 , A.T., radio. 

52695 FPOMO I DT 

T2 Volvo 144 sedan. 4-spd.. 73 VALIANT SCAMP. 2 dr. • 

radials, fully recondi- “ 6 ”, A T., P.S , radio. 
boned by our factory 5,695 J! dodge hT 

trained Volvo tech- 73 ASTRE. A.T., radio. JJ pPy ^ mt 

nicians. $3595 hatchback S1495 ‘ £ ?hr ysl bsm 

J ^ wv 72 BLTCK SKYLARK. 2 dr.. \*toS&MC 

70 144 auto sedan, probably jj j y 8 , a.T. — 
the best we have handled 1 p*B„ radio, 
in tome time. Mechani¬ 
cally reconditioned - new 
radials. re finis bed in 
mid-blue with blue cloth. 

$2995 

TRADES WELCOME 

Top prices paid for 
Premium Used Cars 

3319 DOUGLAS 
Between Woodwards and 
Woolco 

DL 00903A 384-1161 

z 


38.000 miles 
I Was 31895 NOW $1495j 

74 DatsunWogon 

Automatic 

I Was $2495 NOW $1895 

74 Ford Vi-Ton 

I V-* AUTOMATIC 
I Was $3495 NOW $2995 

73 Ford Vi-Ton 

Heavy Duty 4-«peed 
Was $2995 NOW $2695 

72 Pinto 4-Speed 

(Was $1996 NOW $1495 

72 Cougar 

Air. Vinyl Top 

Was $3695 NOW $3295 


.W '69 GTQ 400 

15*? 


jw Was $.'!« 


3-speed 


CAR 

WARS ; 
Continues 

OVER 200 

CARS ami TRUCKS 
MUST BE SOLD 

Denis Farrington 
Special 

78 Mercury Cougar in a 
class by itself. Need I say 
more? Was $6895. STILL 
IS $6895. For the man wt*' t 
knows value call DENTS 
at 384-8174. 

LeRoy Willioms 
Special 

77 Trans Am. Take this | 
black and gold beauty for 
a test drive. With its ve¬ 
lour cloth interior and 400 
cubic inch engine, this ve- * 
hide gives you a relaxed 
feeling of pleasure. Was 
$8996. NOW $8495. For fur¬ 
ther information piPi*-e 
call LEROY at Bus 
384-8174 or Res. 595-4963. 


» cam ntit Mi.r 

D 

0 

U 
G 
L 

A 

VOLKSWAGEN 

AUDI 


DAILY ?V)LOM$T. Victoria. R C . Saturday Septembei 2. 19TA 

! na t CAR* ItiR *Al.r | 14* CAR* FOR *AI.K. ’ t.to CARS TON f 


© 




INFLATION 

FIGHTERS 


Your Largest 
Volkswagen 
Audi 

Dealer On The 
Island! 


Year End 
DEMO 
CLEAROUT! 
All Models! 
SAVE!! 


ENSIGN'S 
SUMMER 
SALE! .1 

WE HAVE A 
FANTASTIC 
SELECTION 
OF CARS AND 
TRUCKS CHECKED 
BY CAR CLINIC 
DIAGNOSTIC 
CENTRE 


74 PINTO S-W 
74 HORNE!' 4 sp. 

73 BURK loaded 

MORE PEOPLE 1 73 monteT caSKIjo , 
HAVE PURCHASED 72 mercury s.w. 

1 72 TORTINA 

VOLKSWAGENS 
from 


NOW $2995 


Transportation 

Specials 

70 FALCON. 4 dr. 6 . A T., 
radio. $1196 

69 MERC MARAUDER, VB. 
A.T., P S, P.B., radio 

$8<F 

69 REBEL, 4 dr. 6 , A.T.. 

P.B., radio. $1096 

68 MONTEGO 4 dr.. V 8 . 
AT. <495 


pc I 66 MElProk 2-dr HT 
*1, 6 ? VOLVO 4 -dr 
$249o 70 MONACO sed . Sir 

70 MAVERICK 

71 DODGE Van 
71 VEGA cuto 
71 PINTO 

71 iUICK Skylark HT 


fiP 

$699 

$16?? 

$14?? 

1??? 

$14?? 

5699 

*2999 

$6?? 

$W? 

$ 1 ,?? 


SELECT 
G.M. TRADES SALK P * ICK 5,1>01 


GOVT TESTED 
PLUS 2-YEAR 
WRITTEN 
WARRANTY 

71 Plymouth 
Satellite 

4 door sedan. V -8 automatic 
p o w e r steering, 
brake?. radk> 


PAINTER 

MOTORS LTD. 

Compare Selection 


73 NOVA V -8 auto 

71 MUSTANG Mach I 

74 CAMARO Sunroof 

75 SKYLARK V -6 Auto. 

73 MALIBU 2-dr., HT. 

74 JEEP CJ5 4x4 

6 $ MALIBU 327. 4-«pd 

75 COMET 2 dr, 6 cyl. 

74 ELDORADO 30.000 mile# 

75 CHALLENGER mag* 

72 COUGAR 351 V -8 
67 COUGAR 4 spead 

SPECIALS 

73 SATELLITE 4-dr. 318 
acto, PS. PB. radio. Only 
$1096. 

74 CELICA ST, radial tires, 
tested. ONLY $2195. 

PLUS yANY MORE 

Compare Price 


SUBURBAN 

MOTORS 

THE HOME OF 

1JNCOLN CONTINENTAL 
ANDMKV 

MARQUIS. COUGAR 
XR7 ZEPHYR 
BOBCAT. CAPRI 
AND 

FORD TRUCKS 

Douglas & 
Saanich Rd. 

1-6131 

. DL00863A 


75 VW 

100 Per Cent Bank 
Financing O.A.C. 

NO REASONABLE 
OFFER REFUSED' 

WIDE OPEN 

'TIL 10 P.M. 
SAT. 'TIL 6 

CALL NOW 

1-3516 

METRO TOYOTA LTD. 

MS FINLAYSON 
DEALER LIC. M413A 


PLUS MANY MORE 
TOR THE BEST DEAL 

Stop Motors Ltd. 

D-02184A 



Jim Raine 

Special 72 Volvo 142 

77 Pontiac Yeqtura SJ 2 .7 C APRIC1. CLASSIC .standard, radio, 
door. V 6 engine, automat- nedan. Automatic, power c ai l- p^ICF $1991 
steering, power brake*. 

if-™, , c f* se,, ! h 74 Ford Pmto 

Hiushed In bnmTi with Hunaht> ,„ 4 rylindtr . 
imyl top. Very clean. 1(jmJ tjpps 

L77 GRANDE L E M A N S* SALE PRICE $1495 


ic. power steering, power 
brake*, tilt wheel, power I 
window’s, bucket seals, 
console, only 8,000 miles. 
Was $6995. NOW $67951 


and economy. Fbr iierson- 
alized service and demo 
ask for JIM at 384-8174. 


SPEEDWAY 

ihan any other 
DEALER 
on the Island 

WHY? 

CHECK and 
COMPARE 

DIESELS 

Customs—2 doors 4 d'xjrs 

DELUXE 

2 Door*—4 T> >or* 
AVAILABLE TOR 
IMMEDIATE DELIVER 

CAMPERS 

limited supply of GETA¬ 
WAY ami WESTFAUA at 
season clearance price*. 

QUALITY USED 

78 Ford Fiesta 
77 Audi l 6 (> 

77 Ruick Estate wa^m 
power 77 Toyota lamdcruiser 
76 Chev’ette 2 door 
76 Rabbit auto 
76 Scirocco 4 $[ieed 
75 Beetle 
75 VW Rabbit 
.75 Ford van 
74 Datsun B210 
74 VW Dasher 
74 Datsun 6 lo wagon 
74 Mercury Mon teg <» 

74 Ford Courier and-eamper 
71 Toyota Mark II wagon 
73 Mazda 808 w agon 
73 Volvo 145C wagon 


72 PINTO 
171 PINTO auto 
171 TORINO auto 
171 HORNET auto 
170 ACADIAN auto 
i 70 1NT. Wagon 
69 PLYMOUTH auto 
; 68 FORD XI. auto 
*,8 CHEVY II auto 
65 WINDOW VAN 


$1912 
$2118 
$2775 
$1975 
820 W 
$16b6 
$1224 
$1260 
$900 
$1488 
51323 
ii’SKO 
$1 Ml 5 
$697 
$1420 
$ 950 
$1285 


Palm Motors 
; 3342 Oak St. 

(1 Block from Douglas 
off Ooverdale > 

ID00641A 38641.385 


LUXURY CAR 


I price, ! 
1 6S8-»ae 


SWOO or best olter Call' 


Rick fowler 
Special 

78 Celica ST, equijjj^l with 1 



CHEVROLET 

77 GRAND A GHIA 2-door 
V -8 automatic, povyer sleet¬ 
ing, power brake*, radio. 

Finished in white with green 
vinyl top. greefi inferior. 

.Wire wheels, low mileage. A 
lovely car. $6350 

78 DODGE DIPLOMAT. V -8 
automatic, power steering. 76 Toyota Corona 4 door 
brakes, radio, power win- 

; daw*, factory air condition- 
jtng. Finished in black me- 
tailic with gold interior. 

$6990 


dial tire*, body side mold¬ 
ing*. etc. Chocolate brown 
w ith beige velour interv *\ 
This immaculate ear hrt« ' 
less than 400 miles. You 
save $$$ PRICED at only 
$6933- Call RICK 4 t 
384-8174. 

Art Moysychyn 
Speciol 


TOYOTA 


, 75 FORD Vton pickup. V -8 
1 automatic, power steering. J 
power tirakes, radio, rear 1 
step bumper. Finished in . 
white with blue trim. $4460' 

73 GMC SUBURBAN. 454 
V -8 automatic, power steer- 

idiH*c coup* ot vino u'tie- 

srEa'Hr $ '5c 1 7 rnSciwn r iSiiy MoalSriL easy lift hitch. Ideal tor 

l^.'^'o2fc«rSS;;tr»ll«r hauling. Red and 

- - v«.. M33 o 

cruiso control, 


LADIES 

1974 VEGA with only 34.000 mile*., wi ’i^i i rvi ^ v-n automauc, power sieer- 

equippoOI wltft 3 $pd. outo^. r « l «'i <77 CodlHoc Coup* d« VlHo D EI«- .:_ tirwver brakes radio 
and rally wtw#I*. IJifO or ca*n ganci JM0 orifljna , ©ne-owner P^r oraaes raaio 


SHOWROOM 

CONDITION 


Y*tM Auto Solo* Ltd. 

“ , D-010I0A 


J-ar 


BANK FINANCING 
1513 Quadra at Pandora 
D-G346A 385-0122, momoa. 

(After Hours. 478-0790* 


/*| ITI A CC I mirror, truiso control, tilt ond 

73 OLDS CU I LAbb 1 tol#*coplc Whtti. outomotic oower 

V« outo . e.S.. P.8 . r*<Ho, door teckt, po»?*r trunk ond win 
Whitt, tfwr* cor. $3??5 , dow», plush corpots ond mots 
- ■t.wKsMIT LTD., 1 trumpot horn, burg I or oltrm syv 
3K-7195. 1 tern, AM-FM storooohonk: rodto , 
’ ond l-trock too*, duol r#mot* con 

- trol mkrors. hoovy lood levtli/rr 

factory sookt Aheef 


110 E soul mo ft Rd.. 



OPEN 

MON. - FRI 
8:30 a.m. -9 p.m. 
SATURDAYS 
9 a.m. - 6 p.m. 


2-door hardtop. Automat- _ _ , 

ic. powder steering, power ' 4 rord 
brake*. Copper with Gran Torino 

white vinyl top, and de- 4 s e<iiin. V- 8 . automat- 73 Datsun pickup 
luxe ’interior. l8.000[j c . |jower steering, power!^Beetle 1 2* 
mile*. $6895 brakes, radio, vinyl roof Y2 Dodge Challenger 

.- _ _ <AUL PRICE $1995 72 Ford LTD 9 pa 

automatic transmission. 76 OIJDSMOBlL>. CUTLASS Wavon 

pc^er steering, radio, ra- Automatic power 74 Ponfinc Astre 71 VW Beetle 

steering, power brakes Statjon w «-, n 4 cylin der 71 Dataun600 

He^ga with vinyl top. automatic, radio,, radial 71 Fargo van 
46.500 miles. $4995 , ipeg 

7 5 BUICK SKYHAWK PWCE S1893 

Hatchback. V 6 . 4-siteed. A ol __ ., 

power tteering, p ower 74 Plymouth- 

brakes, tilt wheel. Clean Satellite 
and sporty! 16.000 miles! Sebrmg plus V -8 automatic 
$5395 power steering, power 
brakes, radio, vinyl roof, 

74 BITCK L£ SABRE, bucket seats f 

4-door hardtop. Automat- | SAJ 1Z PRICE $3795 
ic. power steenng, power 
brakes, air conditioned 77 Dodge Aspen 
Silver with biack vinyl 4 ^ior*r sedan. 6 cylinder. a\> 
top. $2895 tomalic, power steering, ix>- 

per brakes, radio, vinyl 

PREMIUM j SALE PRICt; $4995 

IMPORTS' 77 Pontiac Grand 

77 Subaru nu 4-*pd. $5995 PriX , 

77 Honda Accord, 5-*pd '2 door, V 8 , automatic. 

Leigh Beal $5695 power steering. i»wer bra- 

Speciol 76 Corolla Coupe. 4-*pd. ke*. radio, vinyl roof, buc- 

^ Scirocco. . njlfn 

e S 77 ?p% cury Cou9Qr 

matic transmission. 3«i0i^ Hoo<J» XR7 

V9 Baautitully llnisheti in- !•■* Toyota Mk n. 4<pd 2-tlour. V -8 automatic. [io-- 

atda and very well knot wer steering, po«er brakes. 

u„. Less than 4.000 miles.|j< Corolla wgn. $,pd U9K vtn,l_roor 


! 4? CHRYSLER ROYAL RE5 
tore* $3000 with ports cor. 

653-2177 

l?76 HONDA CIVIC HATCHRA< 0 
; snow hres Booch hoodiights, tocn 
2?.0w0 miles 3S3-04S3 

73 TOYOTA CORONA DELUXE 
door, Automatic, le ' 
miles SI750. 47?-4966. 

196? FORO~XL. POWER STEER 
ng. power brakes, 2?0. Good cor- 
ditioft Asking H.400 365-7409. 

197? DATSUN 

*oaon automatic. _ 

lion. Just tested 477 5*73 

REUA3LE TRANSPORTATION 
reconditioned 66 Comet, 6400 
Good second car 598-75*0 

1967 RAMBLER REBEL, POWER 
steering po*er brakes 343 ct>. In 
5500 Good condition 384-7466. 

6? VAUXHALL VICTOR LOTS 
ot neet parts Cosest otter to 56»X 
tokos AS?-1186 _ 

67 COUGAR” GOOD 789 Rfc 
built tronsmisslon, console. SUuO 
offers 368-7757. 

6« ENVOY GRFAT BEG^. 
ner s cor. esied till March 7? joo 
or test otfer 478-6102 tUI 4 O.IT 

'**’ BUICK SKYLARK. 7 DOOR 
nard loo. excellent mecnam.a 1 
condition asking $950, J5M377 

]l**? VW 1400 FAST BACK. VER V 

rs aesSi. ,w ” 

‘ :0 “ 

1575 MONTE CARLO LANDAU 
'-'n_;er| e * ; • el,en, condlUon. Pnone 592 lUi 
19 6 6 CHRRYSLER TESTfcC 
I transpcratlon $3». 388-5393 

IG7 39.000 


1973 MACH I MUST AM 
miles, 5J95C 592-2317. 


wagon, radio, automatic- 
radial tare*, rear wind<»w 
wiper and defogger. vinyl 
body side mouldings 
Power assisted front disc 1 
brakes. 2200 C.c. motor 
Only 31.000 mile*. Must be 
driven to be appreciated 
Only $4995. To view rail 
ART at 384-8174. 


TEST DRIVE 

an 

AUDI 5000 
PORSCHE 


DOWNTOWN 
971 Yates Street 
at Vancouver 

Dealer Licence N< 


71 VW BEETLE/ GOOD CONDI 
.non. W37S 479-7491 

1*7? DODGE POLARA ~ V ft, *60 

ouio., p,*, vm a?aen;. 


1975 MG MIDGET. EXCElL'-NT 
condition, asking S3200 365-1163 

1?S6 PONTIAC.' A I RUNNING 
condition 53X, 598 7s89 

MUST BE SOLD! 72 DODG 1 - 
Cott Good condition 5570. 477-8002 

• i 8 POR l IHPOR l < \i; - 

TOYOTA CORONA 

1573 2 door, red back trim. *t 
speed radio ioea* second family 
cor. rear seat folds fiat passe-; 
test 7 *eeks ago, mutt sell Havr 
purchased wife newer car 3000 or 


385-2415 



D0M86 ° f, * rl 477-/442 

1977 BMW 

H . 0 M U ( 

— cassAte ster 

rado/B gr 


m 

CAR CENTRE 

YATi* AT QUADRA 

386-6707 

"FOR A GOOD 
DEAL MORE . . 

BEAUTIFUL BUYS i81fc'.tKd.j^n!_ 

- --1-^ AfPfN WAGON, 


-- ^ ,, r ._ factory spoke wheels with steel 

1551 Meteor Cluo Court betted rodlols. Blue firemist me 

fiathood. This cor hos boon rebuilt t 1( , #>rter ior w th motchlng holt 

from the tires up Notn.ng ove^ c bf X,;, too ond dork blue OievTDlet Ltd 

lookod. Entered Wi tihowkj ^ inferior. 18,000 mile* or 16 months MlHstrcarn LTlfvjoici L.ia. 

S£.i *E£T ^Lr rr ?:^.^ er Tro: o g^ur 1<3 ° lslan(1 ■ 

COLLECTORS1TE^1_ jJJgRf EfuaS™ pToi^m’S* 


Kverylhing you need tor! ^ 4 A.T. $2X& 

many many mtles at r<ily \ T v>^ 

$9695. To view call LEIGH J 3 Marfda WJL A.7 


SALE PRICE $5995 


$9695 
at 384-8174. 


71 Datsun 1200. 4-spd. $1995 


if FES S Xn. 4 ”;^ - 3 . c: jtof o it TLfD— 1 

Jnir 6 __ 7J PINTO wgn., 4-sod. 

73 MONTE CARLO V-8. ^ cAPRICOT toodod 

C L*TO GA, 7?7 E * N 73 ^ORD LTD. hT?6 

D-00219A. _ 


474-121J 
Dealer Lie. D01284A 


SACRIFICE, MUST SELL THIS 
week, 1977 T6vot* Corolla 1600, 
power steering, oower brakes, 
quarter vinyl rod roof on *<Wt» 
— new tires, 


low mileage. 


: 1*76 DODGE t-- 4 - 

ecoromicol, 6 oy Under, 3. 


'76 Cadillac sedan De Villa *14,7*) 

77 Lincoln Mk IV *14,7® -- - 

“ Cadillac Fleetwood irouabarn overdrive. P.s. Pj= 
• $15,730 hi tc h, rear defi 

jags? •***-_ 

City-*- 


73 FORD LTD, HT, V-6 
7) DODGE 4X4, 4-*pd. 

7? IMPALA 4-dr., HT, > 
72 TOYOTA >dr 

' “t-,. AT 


72 T-BIRD, 
71 FORD f 


_E MANS Ht, outo 

69 FORD XL. 2-dr HT 
69 TORONADO. loaded 
69 DART, 6 std 
67 MUSTANG, V-6. auto 
67 COUGAR. V-6. outo 



D-001 ISA 304-097) 


Service Garage (Duncon) Lid 1®* 
231 'Mn^thSt. 746-4191 


76 TRANS AM 
4-Speed 


CLOSED 

For Holidays 


VICTORIA 

DODGE-CHRYSLER 

384-8174 

Hours: Mon-Fn. 9-9 
. SAT. 

DL No. D00867A 

1966 CHEVELLE, HIGH PER- 
lormence 327. TRW top end. turbo 
400 transmission, 12 bolt rear end 
tunnel rom, many etetros. $11,000 
invested, serious offers only. Coll 
between S ondJL 479-3*42. ( 

1901 DODGE. CORO’nET 440 
7 -door bardtoQ 318 V* automatic. 


TEST DRIVE 

AUDI 5000 

GOOD SELECTION 
IN STOCK! 


ENSIGN 

Chrysler-Plymouth 
Ltd. • 

DOWNTOWN 
YATES AT COOK 

uealer licence number 
D495A 

386-2411 
Open Weekdays 
Till 9:00 


BUICK 

GMC 


11-500 milts), AM FM 
slereo. sun root metat' : 
green, air conditxyiino 
J yak f i an <* steering 
soeed Pirelli snow tir*s, orijmJ 
owner S?2 7468 

1967 JAGUAR 420G S§DAN a 
cylinder, automatic. Power steer 
mg. radial tires, new -trgnl end 
apd mufflers Radio cassette 

oiaver. Leather seats 1 year *»%* 

1 Runs excellent Bargain, s^eo,. . 

362-6670 658 105; 

RARE MODEL DATSUN CED»'. 
1966 stationwegon. could ba a verv 
attractive un.t, needs sman 
amount of body work, lots of C 
gin# work new brakes, not ooemt- 
ing. ideal fixer-upper Sacril);-. 
$300 . 264 Beach Dr 598 ?652 

1960 AUSTIN HEALEY 300C EX 
callent condition, $3950. See 
Phillips Sfation at Cedar Hill Cros* 
Rds and Shelbourne, or coll owner 
at 695-1960. Consider taking larger 
car in good condition in trade 

72 JAG XJ6 A PAMPERID CAP 
treated with terder loving care. 4.2 
litres, eutomatk. a*r condit«n«.t 
AM-FM radio, electric rear oe 
it aster 112-748-22795- 

1977 


YOU CAN NOT 

r-» Art-.* grtan, with saddle upholstery A77 

Buv A Better Car Stereo ca.satte player. 7.0t«, 

• X 1., ' mi;*s. axftiieni tond.bon S:20n. 

Than An 


100% Financing 

power steering. ^owW'brokes. One Annrr>\/*H ^“rpdit 1 ,t7s Fiyirwufh Sports Fury nard 

owner, oeout tul condition. Asking On ApprOVCO Lreail. to0 , sunroof, air conditioning Bur 
$1,6*6. 592-3641. Scotia Plan’ gtar alarm, radial snows. jCB rad'o 


73 MALIBU 


Only 27,000 Miles 

SGUIAAALT AUTDMART. 4*0 E*- 


,t 75 C°O R R E 0 E N N A T S°R Y 3 0TA 


5f ^295; 1970 BUICK WILDCAT FULLY 

^J^ujppjd^ood cotton 

nt transoortation, good con- 
5900. 596-8662. ESQUL 

PONTIAC LAU REMTI AN iTA , quimalt Rd. 3*2-7195 DO06 56A 

stee^nT’lSd ^akev 68 MALI BU 

Otter* 1*4* McRee MT ( w ^.joead. radio, maos 
Ci^ir-2 DOO^ ^ mtf MOTORS*l'tD**^ 

Abr S Jowar stS^Ing' ; 1«3 OUADRA at PANDORA 

miles, spotless condition, $5095, 



I 47*.»19 


tlr ’ *®i! 1973 RX3 MAZDA WAGON LIKE 
new, 10.000 on new^englrw Mkhe- 


iP'iss - '« 


69 CHARGER. REBUILT 440 AND 
trans, loaded with options, maqs 
-* bast olHer to 


(AFTER HOUR*; 47B 0790) 

SS 396 

1970 Chovolle SS 3*6. On# 

47,600 miles. Turbo 400. 
painft, vector mops, 

5 ho a room condition 
Serious enquiries only 
724-2049. Port Aibernl 

NTURA 6 cyl- automatic 



74 ASTRE HATCHBACK, LOW 

m.ies, new Perllll'o and **tj6u«t 
Excellent Shape. $1,600. 471-7502 

, alter i. _*___ 

75 VEOA HATCHBACK. RADIAL 

tiros, sunroof, AM-FM tape, digital 
Clock, $3000 or best offer. Mik# 
477-7370 anytime._ 

74 CHEVY VEGA. HATCH BACK . 

I f, u 8r* , : c (« v ^«r a ,T7SSf B T7 

[p.m to vlaw, i 

ASTRE HATCHABACK, GOOD 
! condition. First ottar over St ,000. 
366-1946 morning*. 

1974 CHE V~ 

J condition Mutt sell! Ti^iooV 


3*4 349* 

1971 MERCEDES BENZ. 220 D«E 
^ sel 67,000 km, excellent condit'or 
genuinp leather. Grand Prix 
Be< ker radio. $6900 or o tte> 

OH 

' 74 - MIDGET “ EXCELLENT CON 
dition, roll bar, stereo, new tran» 
mission clutch and brake 45.000 
miles. $3600 658 8759 before noon 

| or aft er 8 o.m._ 

~7I~~ MINI 1275 COOPER~$*~EN 
gme $7 500 or best offer Pacific 
«6 Station Sheiooume and Ceoar 
Hill X Road or 592-3193 


BELAIR VI, 4 DOOR 
PB radio. ..tt—WBWf 


Dougia* Volkswagen Ltd. 
3329 Douglls Street 

- 388-5466 

Dealer Licence WXUIA 


m, SIDNEY CAR MART SUTX'^t' 


AUSTIN CAWSRIDOE aOOD 
transportation. $ 4 5 0 . 363-1000. 

1-0193. I 


SEwSkg _ 

seal? afr^cruItT control, EXCEPTIONAL 1970 OLDS CUT i*73 TRANCHERO in' cliian' condl 69 * ARGO window van. partly i .. 

aus® c,?y v auW' 5KX p?. n .» otoa. *..L russte. ArSSSfkfaS^' W 22* r XZ. SSrt ! 

sSK** fessTfe•»A* * % SSfe«,L w,... m W . 


110 E BURNSIOE Rd. 36S-7D4 

"REAL BARGAINS" 

iRGO 


Shop in Sidney and SAVE- 

Extra Clean 1^5 chev impala sf. j-door. 

, 7 nn'riTi,nri Lat# Modal Caro rebuilt 263. console automatic 

if™"** Truck* and Van* New brakes, alte-mator water 

*362 1950 f7J7 jjj, 5t O0I59IA. 656 7432 bump Good ftres. Dual exhaust 


EMPRESS 
CROWN SEAL 
USED CAR 
with a 30-day 
100 PER CENT 
MECHANICAL 
WARRANTY? 

_ _ tigy* gr a.wv. n *1 _ ___ , . , , . , r*t»l A 9* 

X 000 mites, askinq only $J99y Look lof the CROWN SEAL* 1a „ — lllC .. ^ 
Sticker on the WimltihMd Z2&&&, iS&HvrtX 

iai 4\.y inie.fed Must te seen to aoore. 

ff fllSlIlAA Y _ at* Otters on $4500 47t^>686 

TFIrV EXCELLENT LON 

7S Volare Wgn 

^STmaVi’' auT&aVt*’ ltS;'!® C-rdub. loaded 
480 Escuima t Rd , 362 7195 75 lord \ 4x4 

D-Q0BS6A. _ y 

OPFN 

Mon.-Thur* 9-9 
Fri.-Sat. 9-6 

2867 Douglas at Topaz 
182-7121 » D.I 

$5500 firm. 


SACRIFICE MUSI SELL IMME 
dietely 1972 Toyvta Corolla itoc. 
automatic, power steering, power 
*'nyl red root on 

._ _ _ Mrgf, low Tnllp 

age $1700 firm 595-a27?. 


$2895 

t', 19 a altion. c#$$ettf deck. 4 new tire- 

mm 5,!S!SS " ck ’ "T* 'T' , ’“ c 

S,995 „i» vtacEDEs :» s oooo 

condition; must sell within nc»« 

, Aoek or will trade for pickuo in 
good running ordar. 474-0688 

MUST ' SELL 1974 CORVETTE ■ 
2nd owner. 150 *u»o, power steer 
inq maqj, radials. tan teat ns.-, 
(dark brown exterior 478-4704 

i^ni >yya i VcRCEDES PENZ 2X, DIESS 
IXJ1-.27A (970. dime* Import from G*rman> 


TERMS 


73 2-TONE GREEN MAZDA , 

GT, 4-speed, radio, superior run m i,#i 
ning car for low cos*, worry-fra# 
second car or primary transport. 

-- Trr — to buy — 


73 FORD 
brakes, power 
uperior run | mllev excellent 
l» worry-fra* tvanlngs. 


only 'JftncT t^"jSw 1974 CELKA ST, r„006 MILES. 

Maidas; W100 or ntarasl offer. AM-FM radio, now exhaust 
474-1719, S-Fp^ti. 1474-2600, attar S P.m._ 


CUSTOM, POWER S fESBt DL^riWA 

cSiS 36l'iS? 71 VOLVO 

co ^° ° RADtO, radial 

flon, GARDEN 


- - 100 per lent Bank Financing on „ WE RCURY. 390, 2 DOOR. 

SPORTS CAR. , he c ar of your choice O.A.C. miles. Horn inn tonditlon. 

* WO or bast call GARY now at 368-7722, Need* ,«>• torv. 

YATES AUTO SALES LTD., 9J0 »2-32U. n.ghts, 592 3064, Danny. 

.. kA26»'«r.¥».. AMMiliii.lM OLUSMOklLE OELTA M Y *"> O<l., 0 A._ » 

1 n TOYOTA, auto, new pa nt $1395 nardtoo, full pover premium con v oRANmDA 4 UR SEDAN VB f «mnr ^tn^nrt nr.Tl. 
-i 4 ' SPE !5 '72 FIRENZA. 2-dr . auto $ 995 ditlsn. Aest offer 3fa-3726. auto , P.S.. P B radio, new redtei 

I nry * I n SIMCA auto $1250 10 „ AAnxiTB “ r ADI ft* white tires Pretty cer. only 26.000 mile* 

nv.. 1 J'« TY r^ A -.IP W DATSUN ’ j-ton truck $1295 P^ M Julck GARDEN CITY AUTO SALES 

SALES K LtD - 2978 Douglas, ;j COURIER 1 ;-,on, 71.000 ml. S1SI0 ’'**• ** * LTD... 2978 Douglas. 362-5IH 

362-9111 D-003I9A _ ; 67 MUSTANG GT. rebuilt -..i. uw» ikjiiji - 

_ _ _ 'Zy'~ Lin ^A \rrnm~n iiiVFl 67 PLYMOUTH, 4-dr. 

'*6 MUSTANG, 351 W RADIAL ! 19*? BUICK WILDCAT. 2 DOOR ' ^/ey H ^ D '^» r |{£ °SS'rotH mao * , dr 

t.rea, 1900 or offers. ’71 Blazer 4x4. hard top. radials. 420 cti In., $1295; wneeis, radials, tow mlieag# $5,850' ?° PDOGE^ Coronet ^^tr 
CST, automatic, mags, _True 658-57*9 or 966 Saturn* Place or offers 47?-i*03 

track*, $3too or attars, 679-1560 ...- " wm&s 


Rzc-Mip cut 

eiAMC deep JEM) 


^ / d VlHRlMyR •*UH UR HI VI -- __k - - 

aulo , P.S., P B., radio, new redial *3sJ3?^f #r d *^ ' 

tires. Pretty cer, only 26.000 miles •** ?42V *”* r 4 ___ 

£<, GARDEN CITY AUTO SALES! 77 CELICA OT. METALLIC 


anytime. 


UNTRY WAGON, 


m vJ!°£m>nMttk, power ataerng, 
pewor brake*, trailer hitch, frana- 

X2r«Ti!>mr* aM * w 


MSB COUGAR XR7 AUTOMATIC, 

muttSk asrwrtta 

condition. *2195. 679-7251._* 


9961 CHIV BELAIR. 6 <YLINDiR 
•^matic, $300 or ba*t otter. 

asr 6 


, rebuilt trans, 


nut 


75 HOND/ 
*2000. 3*6-6 


'A CIVIC, 34toO MILES. 


I oQ VALIAii I , 

70 DOOGE C« 

71 fMPALA, 4 
66 PLYMOUT 


* 600 67 ACADIAN 4-DOOR. BUCKET 
81250 , teats. 6 cylinder 3 speed standard 
!!»? ATtat Offers’ 39T6974 


6200 

3634! 


CELICA _ . .H_ 

5-sp*ed. mint condition, only 
miles, otters to $5,900. 
579 


CREAM 
OF THE CROP! 


1969 TOYOTA AUTOMATIC WELL^^g ZEPHYR, ORIGINAL MILE- 70 
cared tor. extra liras. Asklno (#9# #od pajnf, vary good running, 

S129S. 6564643 'order, reliable student tranaoor^ 

SfTO5^ra£iu55t1 20to0 ORIGINAL 

- - —- 1 — poNTlAC VENTURA 2 dr 


needs t 

Jlyn Roi 


'76 GRAN TORINO WAGON 

rasTisrusir" 


s? v osr 


RTIBLE '66 FORD FAL- 


story end axhaust. $2500. 652-!' 


«sr 


B 8 * *SSRSS 


1965 JMP- v - T 

seats, consol#, power steering, ngw| 
whitewallv Beautiful car. $1,200, 

591-165*._ 

71 HOflOA CIVIC HATCHBACK 
36too original mlias, lady or] 
sxcaiiant condition. $2900 
657-152*. __ 


D 00319A 

V 74 FIREBI'RD^^ -72 DATSUN 7 DOOR> 1500, NEW 

t,~ 4 -<jir . niV p»mt $1595 - ' - V-* auM, PS PB rpdro. bucks* tires end brakes. Paint anq engine *77 OIRYSLFR CDRPOB \ 

_JTk? 4 -dr auto $' 995,DODGE _ SUPERB EET 383 gQ^i i v ear old Excel lent snap# $1,300. e 

REBEL Station wagon $ 79»l Magnum. 4 speed Very qood con MALT AUTOMART LTO, 660 Es J*5-4721 between 3 30-6:00. «b HAT SPIDER 

OPEN o S aL* ! ' M *»«». rrere. oloj-umile cutl»» 73 I'At'KU X 

U- 00 S 4 /A 7J vE(lA WAGON 33toO MILES. , A * E ^ L w ®?!^ UTV ? <*Ocr hardtop, wmtg on. 

Deluxe model, immaculate. Bast J* +*}* -beautiful condition. $3.995., 

otter 14S-165J Sir. AM-FM-taPt, immaculate S92-3641 

- 4 -;-, Must - 

I 204 SX. RED. S57-3660. 

I. to«k - 



__ __ WAGON, 6.700 

!l*«. Estate sat# 458*966 


1*7* ASPEN SE 

mill - 


Star CAN40, 


s^ c as*-yy.x WN ' 


17400 65 VOLKS' 


PONTIAC BEAUMONT. IM7 IN 
running coildlttgn. **00- 592-3*5*. 


*2 PARISIENNE 4-uOOP HARD 
top. Rune wall Asking $350. dowt. power 

3*54134. __ *_ _I beat otom poor 

_ _ VW SUPER BEETLE 19T1 *4.000 w d •??: 

» CAMARO. EXCELLENT CON-163 PONTIAC. DEPENDABLE, mltas, tor tala or trad* for West- 19*5 ACADIAN STATU 
Inn, $3,000 565-1226 tested $150 3*4-9Ttl * tali# 36645m running condition 5«*-22 


■wtoTs * 


as 


CHALLENGER RT 
modaL 


_ JM Cl 

standard, factory 


Maqnu 
t 5-fr#< 


AIR-OOXtrmONED 

r FORD RANCHERO SOUIRE 
-6, auto.. pj„ o.b. air, power 

aEHfc3ifrJjipyDi 

LTD.. 2975 Douglas. S*2-9ft1. 


'76 MERCURY .MAROUIS 2-DOOR 
hardtop, axcallant condition. 37.000 
miles, power brakes, power Aigj 
Ing, air conditioning, power 

" - -—Wi ■ 


1977 DATSUN 
15°400' 


be seen Asking $3000. 


miisage. 


197* 


MERCURY 

1974 DAT1UN B7t0_HATCHBACK,, 


-.needs good horn*. Excellent condl- 

MARQUIS|Hon. Asking $3,700 or best offer, 
plus #lr,» 3*5-3907 or 474-2653. 


' 1971 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE 1J00 
c< dual carbs. rebuilt motor n*A 
Ogtch pressure plate, otters 
1*1X00 362-0345 _ _ 

LEAVING FOR SCHOOL "sEP T 
,7th. must ssiV '71 Formula 455 
! Firebird. receipts for motor, 
brakes starter cjutch 364-437; 

1974 FIAT t?» SPECIAL TC 4 
door sedan, clean, one o^ner !oa 
! mlieaoe excellent condition Ask 
’ Ing *2,650 477 3164 

fYipv-L*TTt- crrvcpAv LENHAM hardtof im 

b LUK\ bn h STIM.trL'Kx maculate condition. $425 or oMers 

rs mercury MARgns i *”:*'<» _ _ 

69 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE GOOD 
condition, tested asking $|?50 or 
| cast otter. 2$5-5B02_ __ 

' MUST SELL '6?“MGB IN* GOOD 
■mechanical condition, needs minor 
Apr k >1 600 firm 3*6-^110 anyt.me 

• 19*9 MGB RE-BUILT, VERY RF 
; liable, must sell this week 
, 593 6319 


.. .. __ t -;-j ONE OP A KIND 

CORVAIR MONZA, GREAT i Clean. macHOnlcaiiy sound, tssted 
- - - ■ ■ condHton. $690 or bast offer good mileage. 1970 Datsun 4-door 

SL.njsnJ«4^ TLt ri.r.5; ; ‘ ,a,[ -r *■ 

am-tm taoe. $2500 . 3*5-7305 1 VINTAGE CARS. t$37 


5 THUNDERBIRD 
77 MATADOR COUPE 
76 VOLKS DASHER 
7 AMBASSADOR SEDAN 

GUARANTEED' 


RARE 
4 soeed- 
656-5664 


FIREBIRD 

l 652-5 


lot 


MinM 


AUSTIN 


work te rsstors 


73 PINTO. NEW BRONZE ME- 
taHftc paint. 35,000 mias, like new. 
$2000 or otters, 3*6-7207 


FOR SALE: 

tlonwagon 

attar 5 p.m. 


67 CORTINA *TA• 
last offer. 312-0651 


74 ASTRE, AUTOMATIC TRANS- 1973 OLD6MOBILE 9*. FULLY 
mission. $2,000 miles Must sail loaded wan kept. $3,500. 592-7522. 
$1,600. kyOUT 72M074. 

BEETLE' 


1966 FORD FAIRLANE 
clutch $600 firm. 476-3576 attar 


| Rollbar 
59S4M13 


K. lots of extras 75 VW BEETLE- EXCELLENT * 

476-3501 avaninea.condition, radials. cassatts, radio t 67 CAAAARO 2*3, 4-BARREL, 
[ tow ml leap* 354-0456 _ header*. 3-tpeed standard 642 5700 


RAMBLER- INSPECTED, 
b irsnsnilkiion. >50 , 656-3*56 


RtcM’Dci fr 

riAMC Jeep tZIMS 


736 Cloverda In 365-8756 
DI. 00247A 

Absolutely as ngw VA t97 U ? E Toyot# Co¬ 
ro ■-a 1*00 automatic power steer 
ing. Power orekes many options 
50 000 mltas W.350 or oest trtter 
5*5-627; 


17? MINI NEW ENGINE AND 
transmission Custom dashboard 
I 38? 6039 after 5 p.m 

I 1976 MG MIDGET, 
excellent condition, l 


€ xeetlent. JBWWBPPWI 

wheel* otters 2714 Lincoln 


FAN 


end retiatte asking >2695 
nifysj*6.055b _ 

ME RCE DE5 J00 SEL 
-t9ff good icndHion pert tr»ti# 
(onsidered. $»S00 firm 657 J63U 











































































































































I 


;o 


DAILY COLONIST \Vu»tt*. B.C.. Saturday *nptembpr 2 .1978 


IM M*OHl. 1 AHs IAI 


SAVE 15000 
PORCHE m 

only 12600 km, Ferrtrl ted, targa 
' vm sunroof. WgupunM touch 
*u«*, AM-FM.$W-LW<etsetto. For 
aojpointment to vt«w phono 


iHIlkft. IlLhtS 

AN1> VANS 


TRI CKS. fWftE* 

AND VANS 


COLLECTORS 

*3 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE, locally 
owned, 2-owner only 42,000 orlg i- 
not miles, convertible top. hardtop, 
now Michotin redials. extro set 
wire wheels end knock offs. First 
$1*00. ESQUIMALT AUTOMART 
LTD.. 4*0 Esquimau Rd.. 3C-7195 
0-00056A._ 


ALFA ROMEO 
EUROCAR 

731 PEMBROKE ST. 


4X4 RAMCHARGSR 

70 5 .E., 400V4, P.S., P » , auto., 
•d o Large wheels. urge, roll bor. 
6100 G.V.w. package. ik. Bucket 
soots, console, roor soot Metallic 

SKSsT-'-' 

70 DATS UN LONGBOX, 14,400 
mlieo, 4 o pood, factory air condl 
tton'no. dTattol clock radio, c-w 
unique all ftortolas* camper, tint¬ 
ed glass. oven, furnace, root reck 

eft.-* sEw** 

O-0IV50A 


5-SPEED 

76 FORD COURIER PICKUP. One 

-miles, economical 

,Tr GARDEN 
—-^ " 7 ' 

73 Ford crow cob V4. P.S., p B 

radio, 4 speed, split rims,- 

vslve grind, new pe'nt, 

♦amlly truck, or offers. - 

CITY AUTO SALES LTD., 2*71 
Douglas. 302-0111. D40319A. 



McCtllum Motors Ltd. 


iMBft g GIGANTIC 
SlMIO-SUMMER 
USED TRUCK 
CLEAR-OUT 


1963 STEP VAN, ALUMINUM] 
body 292 motor, 4 speed manual. 

' Ontario satety check. Trailer 1 

__Mich. Easy on gas Good sneoe. 

V HONDA CIVIC. LOTS OF Phone after * P m. Ouncen 
•’•as. Over 2500 invested. Otters LMtBt 

o- QUnd 04000 . 3044S0Q._;_ INTERESTED IN VANNING7 

FORTY '71 6 PITFIRE A unique '75 GMC Van. Black, low 
ncwroom condition. Overs w r«Bi- mlleane. extras, too numerous t 0 
al t.res. Offers over *2800 592-36*5 lisi. hor appointment to v*w 
--——ffin -»'•»»• 


ID* PART*. ACTESSORIf.' IM 

SUN ROOFS ^ 

car or van 
i with or without / 
installation 

VAN SEATS 

. * IQ and low back 

new and used 

15% OFF 

present stock 

TOMMY'S 
UPHOLSTERY 
748 PRINCESS ( 

383-8941 

TRUCK 
WRECKING 

CROSS ROAD MOTORS 
COBBLE HILL, 743-2157 


CARS AND TRUCKS 
WANTED 


in* TAMPERS. TRAILER* 
and MOTOR HOMES 


WE PAY 

the Hifrtieft Price* for 
Your Clean USED Cnr 
TRY ITS - YOU’LL BE 
SURPRISED! 

CONTACT CARL SPICER j 
Used car mgr. 
Empress Pontiac Buick 
GMC LTD. 

M DUO) 227A 

ift* < AMPER*. TRAILER* 
aud MOTOR HOME* 

DOMINION 

MOTORS 


u a »»,'* 

rw" 


CAMPER*. TRAn.ER* 
and MOTOR 1(0ME* 

ZODIAC RV SALES 
& SERVICE LtD 


Monn.r. home* 

AND PARK* 


Now 24**0 KNIGHT Squire 3 bod 


IM ROOM* WANTED 

LARGt MliOHT ROOM AS 8 TU- 
die tor sartor clt'ian. rooioneblo 
ram, view, stair*. *s*nH. 


474-1228 OMEN MON.-lot. »;»-»:30 bOCk on largo 
Sun. 10-4 e.m. D4JBH1A , W6.50C 
Special nit of noarty.now traitors,! 


gMyrsyra ,p ’ 


.. »inai# end tandem axle New 24*58 BRITTANY S bed 
S'teoing 4 to 8 . 3th wheel. BH't room, dinette, large living room 
itor home tempore, trueeu-i well located, 12x24 aluminum 
owning. Many extras $27,900. 


me campers, tnickt, au-i 

V / A k. I l * a r*r* 'umowm*, bO*S. outboard motors, ewmng. many lirru i//,juu. piwr». *»w. w nur. _ 

VANGUARD 5Sim oPn-WiA p.?*. pELI* i»» «uooy «,n». „ 

,«oto*ho«es-CAJWER- SR.' SS'JTSv.mLSSSff* 

TRAILERS -- 5th WHEELS claims by our large body and mar t iii 750 
- VAN CONVERSIONS - paint shops. Repairs to ell makes m9Pt ' 

Import Campers - Canopy Top* outboard motors, all rooeirs by A u located In Adult Fork 
qualified m echanics. _ 

1f75 Nomad, trailer Ttndem C *2* ,L€ MOMCS LT ^ 

/VtUHJI I ItJl • ICO wheels, fully oouippod end immec- *> Creese 3*6-3623 

uiate. __ \ _ _P ^OileA 

113(2 SQ. FT. 

at a price herd to beet Only 
*24,900. in a family «ree. 


OAK BAY AVE. NICE LOCATION 
near recreation centre end village. 
‘ eh-comer, lallovision. 




i Included. Friendly atmov 
*105 592-1W. 


SUNNY ROOM W»tm FXJDSr 
vove end sink, suit quiet male 
oe ns toner or student, 1255 Pan¬ 
dora. . 


Good Selection of 
All Sizes in Stock 3 - 5 . j-jl 

SPEEDWAY MDTpRS LTD. 


19*7 72 Citation trailer tendam 
| " equipped. idee* tor 


VANGUARD 

SALE 


4742154 


HOME OF 

—LAYTON—HOLIDAIRE trailers 
,*,1 ■> *- -t ~ K,T Conyers 

Why Sell Your Car' -CHINOOK Motor Homes 
Hove vour import or domestic en- . , . , nw( 

,m« done by .wotesslona; re Good Used KV S 

Sea%V^fYnd VecffnV iitXv u ACHE J^rdfop Jen, ^trailer. ^uV’oW Vanguard oui 


CEDAR CREEK 

1 Beautiful 12*8* 2 -bedroom, adi 
location. Just a lovely home, 

. large deck, garden ..J 

Friendly 


ARF YOLK TRt r CK 

SPRINGS ADEQUATE? ___ 

At sell end install DENDOFF;* good buy at *15,91— __ 

overload sprigs fur elljtrucks m docile Homes. DL 01635A. 474-1288. 

[^11. « E .COL WOOD 

N.V 7. VAN 6 ..A.D VAN CON » »!>"**. .*»; T. “TI't 

Version on ma* Dodge chassis *- HOMEMADE CAMPER. LIGHT ,od qarden, the strewberc es are' Private cooking facilities 479-zif j 
Features 360 V-*. auto. P.S., and enougn tor , ton steeos.four, ice i, J8 t right! trendy Mobile Homes, - . 

-- .... *a ■— - - Closet. QL016MA 474 - 1 ?** ' S70 ^AIRFIELD. NICILY FUR- 


VANCOUVER ST. CLEAN 
quiet, furnished, share bath, 177 
including uttTlfi«. Men pm. 

a77.11/M 


FROM S120 INCLUDING UTIL> 
ties, table, cne>r« oed end hot 
plate, vie West area. Phone 
3*4-5605. 


NEAR FORT-COOK. FRIDGE, 
Sink, cable vision, fully furnished. 
3*4-5910._ 


2 ROOMS FOR RENT. UTILITIES 
included. C ose to Woolco and 
■ TV f- 


buses. Cable _ 

si 15 . fairfield! 


1120 . 386-0769. 


__ rnouyn tor 1 ion steam w 

P B. stereo, sleeos t. Has 2 cu. ft. box. stove, sink, cupboards. 

?-*av trid-ie, ♦urnai’e. flush toilet table new aluminum root, new, 

.. .Itop tent Trailer. ^| US other Venouerd ouelltv tea port-a-ootli. rpot fBCfc* for boat . , 

DODGE 1 radpsman Mini w^~rr — dw* 1?-V6lt" ENGINE !l?^lx m0d * , ' ,Ur «59*5 ,urei Govette^m-liw.* 0 *' . s’?St. perkDke surroundings, fully FURNISHED QUIE.T ROOM, OFF 

:>I-itorhonu uconditioned new bearings, rings. 73 1* tt ARISTOCRAT on tarn price ONLY 513.996 -WnT _ WHEELS? £££t£ a iK!!?t f 

nowroom condition ovardrlve. 68 GMC ’VTON. V-* AUTO. 7n 1)nn( 7 iF riOV ver waifon clutch, valve orind 5450 t* dams . tul!y MH^on 1 amjed. New 7* VANG^JARO 27 tt . Terr ■ J trailer suable ‘^ 0, i v J' 

tM-FM stereo. Phone 74 «- 2 » 7 *. West Coast mirrors, heavy 4 V®V cnanoe installed. Davs M2-607C " r C9n0,Uo vmi otm .L r * i,2r • Uve ir 1 luxury! This ^ autT what five vou in " a - i7tw r 

;bomptK;, r adjo^ buck#’ o w*ts ; ^3 UsTERNATlONAl, In*- nights message: 3 * 4-36 h 7$FRO%T , .^R A _l l 1 w^t^ey NMoi‘ ?* | S, ’°°° 


■71 MG MIDGET. 3000 MILES ON GARDEN 
new motor, musk sell, going to ltd , 297* 
school. 658-5995. 


IITY AUTO SALi 


velall 

77 FORD FlOO PL* V -8 


New 


GOOOBYE RUST 
rust replacement panels 
meet 


landscaped, gardener's dream su-:Oak Bay Ave. Ladies only, 195 pe- 


65 MGB. 9jUBAT CONPi^ON. j- 73 ~VW BUf . 7-RAM. 4 -SRCKD, j 77 G\BC05 Van uucks“W?m, 'at^Frank'* Tr*qS'67SV 

•rust sell. Asking S1700. 479-9754' r g d ; 0 , tested radial tlres- new ~ tawnr ^, inq shop. 1*19 Douglas, 3*5-»22 

- S* 0 c s °?LEr LTD ARD 29 E 7 N . ‘° " *****'** -u '» '*■" LANCE Ctmaer 


, SWIKk DouB'aii’aB-flTi: D'-003I9A 
or "best offer. 477-5427. 


OWNER LEAVING 
mud sail bv Sept. 5th, 

M G>. $2200 O -- - 

l« 6 * AUSTIN COOPER, 12758 EN- ]977 Ford F400 , 5 
qme, Weben cerb. Mlmlt^tfs, rninum box. *1,1 

muc h more, $2200. 479 -M 7 *. _ g^-d condition 

1971 TR8 REO, RED INTERIOR, ;21 * j<M4 


van 

76 FORD FlOO PU. 6 c> v l. 

75 DODGE ^e-toft window 


^.Ar^ N T®£ ' c “^' o^n? U se"ara > tMronrc2drwm ''evenings'656-5751. 

HYQRAUUC JACKS. Coo\tr»- w(th |„ ro# goji^e bed and unique .974 DODGE DIPLOMAT 2V 
iv,r intercom 54595 Ilyina room wltn comfortable chav 5500 miles, air cond.- 

AIRSTR-A.W luJi it,field and chairs. Ideal to take »;oner 3 wav frlda*. stova oven, 

......» H-I. -..-w sleeps' 5, Immecuiate condition. 

‘ 9 77 i 514 500 . 477-6715. 


//ANT YOUR OWN LOTI 
Here's a gorgeous \ z acre wa¬ 
terfront lot for long term lease 
with eventual purchase option! 
New 14' or 24 ' wide Buyrlgnt, 
474-2154. 


; ROOM FOR LADY, ON CAR 
herry near Fort. $92 477-5*7* attar 


NON-SMOKER AND NON- 
drinker, lady, brignl, clean. Fair- 
field district, available. 3*2-64*1. 


MUST SELL 12X48 GLENDALE. 1 BRIGHTLY FURNISHED ROOM, 
Maior appliance*, drapes and ‘ ||RiB HfllMjiR 


and car- 
addition. 


FTXAL OFTER 

ton, with 20 ' a'u- , 

300 miles Very | van 

,,rm 7* aiEV Kd Blt/er 4x4 

uood running - orderTctOo', » 4 -» 67 , MUST SELL 6 * CHEV. VAN, J? f?5?! . 

515 - 4343 . haw finsihad. an naw 360 V-* auto-,71 DATSUN PL, < 

- . h#t £^ s> Vtflfar, «j 


LARGE HOUSEKEEPING ROOM, 
fridoe end **ove included, snare 
bathroom. *1W. 477 *522. 


j jam m ’" FtCT ;?^S5: !t 5 a PU *nu 

caro ' ^ 4W ' t P ^P w l 73 VULXS^’AGFN Westfa-!^ 
POWER ! lia tamper 


‘64 RAMBLER, '<3 METEOR ,v "’ __ _ _ 

S? ,f, oft#r n r^ ir Mus , t 0 < sel| O fcv P *r^kend ) 6 * SHASTA 27' trailer fully salt New '71 23' VANGUARD tandem 1*74 =v*-TON FO*D RANCHER i oat.'' Garden' •nod'*'and' - 

ur 0 »er>. Must tell ty weekend conraingg. L * rfl# fridge, ducted, trailer fegturim iarga rear xlT camper speciai. 390 automat. , no.oco ^ # i9ri i mm#d i at# oc. 

’—--—-neatlno 24295 ^afhroom W |th fuc. 6.6 cu ft. c . power steering, power brakes, | cuoanev. 478-9129 after 5 p.m. 

•55 FORD, 2-DOOR. GOOD „ 3-.vay fridge, ovan and large front wim 1975 •' cab over camper, weekends anytime. 

parts. $100. 59 Ford Fairlane 7* HOLIDAIRE 14' trailer, very livlna‘room. $ 4 ,aoO. 478-7272 attar S p.m. Vf VoArTi T re -TnwTT- n r r„~J 1 - - 

2-door. Interior good shaoa. 8125. clean 52755 SALE PRICE ONLY *9.2951 ** — 7 1 |~ TaYvjt'~TWAtL ~ 1 tomm *7? IffrjA** ROOMS. ONe WITH 

- -- - SKSSffVJftff 1 u 2 *SJ.- JTL natJ^^SRS?’ SiS: 1 ‘!»rf «« ««"» 

THESE ARE JUST A 4.000 miles, eleaos 6 , 2-ajY ftldge. Adults only. 384^791. 47M1H, DL 

SAMPLE OF THE GOOD BUYS stove a room tor. toljal* .Raace l 797A. 

COME IN AND-- 


VICTORIA 4-WHEEL DRIVE 
»pd., FREE WHEELING HUBS for any 
make of 4-wheel drive. D-13S3I. 

597 Hillside at Rock Bar 3*8-651 


PW, ^ C iEf& 0,, ' ES 

Mon. to SAT. R * AM.'Iq 5 P.M. 
Dealer Licence Number D- 0044 *a 
1703 BLANSHARD ST. 

“ - oark- 


93 1 McClur e. _ 

I FREE ROOM CARPENTER HAN- 


> SEE THEM ALL!! hitch in cluded, * 2.90 8. 8»48 S4._STEADY PAD RENTALS SUIT - 1 ,or h * ,p * oth#f roorrS ' 

JUST TRADED 


I month. Non-smoker. <77 * 


58 TRIUMPH TR230. 
sail. Phone 3*4-4637. 


MUST 


76 GMC VAN. 


J972 MGB, 825007 GOOD MECHAN- i tlftor arwl^whois. cassette on ‘2 \ Q1 J\SW AL.EN window TWO 

I;a> condition. 3I2-5M3._fiKL m "«‘ S|10 ° van "V rMr s.at Trac 

seats 


197* CORVETTE. STILL UNDER ! 3 * 5 W4? a ,er 3 :- _. 

.-.arranty, all power 112-74*4)763. 73 PASSENGER SCHOOL BUS. 

•o—rKwm t 1 ruJ Pot ,0 mo,or v *hida inspection 
, 2 *- standards but, wood for privaie 

a dv drl v an. e xt ra*. * 2,381 477-7920 ul>e w besf oi<er contact f 

*.i RED MGB. ,NEW PAINT, Hugrjon at 656-1129 


69 FORD FI 00 4x4 


nood. Offers on S2A00. 477-6*59 


TRI CKS. RI SES 
AND VANS 


H75 ONE TON F350 SUPER 
camper special, all extras 32,000 
miles, *5500. 197} one ton F3S0 14 


157* SHORT CHEVY VAN. 350. 
P.S., P.B., ti t wheel, custom inte¬ 
rior.* sunroof, tires, wneels, only 
71,000 miles, excellent condition. 
Sc.200. 3*8 4595. 


ni seats. 383-2*70 

mi FORD 2 DOOR 3B0 AUTO.. 

UO^T VFHICLF^ chromies J.-80, Holltv *50 fraction 
I VliIIIwLlj ^,. 4 ^ g.. rMr 391 geers, Misueila 
D r A ▲ I mcrNOr-toHF- nous unassembled 47 »-5735, Oar 

D L A A spec , 71 * TO yot a 

DOWNTOWN reouiw carb! starter^Good 3 auto 

1101 Va, S, at i^A 'ZZi'Zr*T-££, 

L)I 1 . J-13. tx'X.iA g 3 s tank and burned out motors TrmlprL fnmnPri; 

COLWOOD Davs Aniwef 'Qiierb, Lampers, 

iHoh Island H’way 


COASTLINE 

trailer centre 

3388 DOUGLAS 

(Across from Suburban Motors! 

SEPTEMBER 

CLEAROUT 


trailer, rear .J-mece biiivumn, smgie person or working couple on 1 H' TRAILER FOR RENT, FuP 
peft<ontained. qood condition, Lak« October 1st., t msned, university area. $100 per 

DATSUN LONG BOX MM*? * *- ^ ** ’ ^ . 

miles. 4-soead. factory air con- --—j 

djtlonlrvg, digital clock radio, IMMACULATE T , ^^ 

c-w, unique an fibreglass trailer, sleeps 6 . furnace, 3 way * ■<*»• wood Pornmg ti ryiece , \ im . 

camper, tinted glass, ovyt fur- fridge. 2 oropene tanks, new tires. 2 . , 1 *! , ’tL 5 a ^^ 1# sur * dKk ' carport. .— ■ - Z- — f - 

nt'i, roof rack and leodrv place tor porta-potl! S279S, workshop. 478-0219 < 5*5. WALKING DISTANCE 10 

47995 743-14*4 _ _' BRING YOUR OFFERI ° ' 

v,th HUNTFRS -" - I—AC..W. 4t N „ nt/wrlonkino ll57,Johnson St. 


OWN A DELIGHTFUL 6 -ROOM 1 ROSS BAY. STOVE FRIDGE, I7A- 
R IP-®** - , 0f ' lv ! Itatlon fireplace, bed-chesterf.e d, 

»y 51*,SOO. Wood burning fir«)lace. > jij 5 . 695 - 7609 . 


75 TRAVEL MATE 
fridge, furnace 
dean 


C ’‘.r v#rv sl^de-i'rTcam'iereMe'Complete with taaufutTl lakaT Large covered vt^ YOUNG PEOPLE TO SHARF 
foiiet v^ ^ r ^ t ^ovT ^1 root C# " J*"« Ky 3 * 3-?*22 after 

^ rack and ladder SloCO Ex cat lent PR**' Buyftgh t, 47 4-215 4. _ « _ 

Trade-Ins' 


BRING YOUR OFFERI 


9 , Immaculate 6 * X 12 overlooking 


rack and ladder SloCO Excellent Rg **. 1 

condition. 477-5741 1975 }r x 6 * ESTATE MOBILE RiT7. HOTEL—DOWN TO/, N 

\/ a Mr 11 * d n TIIAVPI TRAI1 FR ^Orr>#. FurniS^^d AM ADDiilHCtS. Flfyfitor Sirvct T.V I0UO3# 

^ Supt dellxe reir tSthrol Ut«llty room. 13' x 34' sundeck. All 7,0 Fort IT 383-1C71 

1 '77 1! vanguard, deluxe ftbre«iass ipgrate^b^room. as new, S745u, r • *A? n • b !• offers considered 
rna * ' ^/7i 5 ioHers. 657 1166. mornings. 


647-3997 afer 6 p.m 


BRIGHT ROOM COOK-FORT 


382-6122 


/*478-1741 


1971 10 BOLT POSSI REAR END 
Dir Lie D-U83 separate 456 gears. Mika 3*3-4986 
1 Attar 5. 


TRANS-CANADA 
TRUCK SALES 
Mill Bav 
74M312 

;« Fora, 1 too 00 Mby Mi. ft 5JS. Xn-m. 1 S»‘i,Sk"eAiiB€if'' ci^auto ■»»»»«* ■ ■»■'.« ■.■ ^_ 

j SALES LID. 257* Douglae. SELLING OLDSMOlilLE TURBO 
,1 2*2-9111. D-00319A. idO transynTs 


n*t? m«in) irioq, msnzt.*'”* "smet'-jss^nrSiii-voui-iio:• ^iWStaS-. 8 *"* 

»«,lKh.Wlr.* .. { ON! ION WC T«ycx AND ™ V*N« ll ** *£ - 

/l ov. uanouarq nv.n HTr' 3W ' >4 x 70 Ftaetwood. everything le^s LARGE FURNISHED, Quit 

71.9 7 vanquard, oven HTG a !,« na^' condition. Phone than 3 montns Qla M f in bagutlful gent'eman. close in. Sf5. After 

from t J50 - 478 * n “ , ad/it pane. Check erica. 642-4650 p.m., 47*-*155._ 


2 usad canopy tops 


_ toilat furnace ’ car bated ViSaM BARGAIN GLENDALE MOBILE FAIRFIELD AREA FURNISHED. 

Motorhomes See 0ur Complete »■ ^ 


. -1 on baby_ 

fiatdack VI. 4 speed, very nice 
condition, S3400. 


<1 irTtirnationaT^cabovar diesel. A GnS:’V an. A |!Sck 0 L! ^fl, otti'A. **1^"*" 

tandem, like naw, V 8 , power mileage extras too numerous to iS* DODGE **»TON 440. ONLY 

sniff, tran*. R.S. .18,0<So front. - st. For aopolnfmant to view ^JooTm w,th '76 11 ft Falta VERTAGA^E SHIFTER. VALVE 

18,000 rear axles. Large volume phone 721-390/_cameer including jacks fr dge. covars tach. '66 Beaumont doors 

dump tody, vary nice shaoa, /v.erci5ry TON 4 X 4 fern sc*, toilet, only S11.900. Coast 479-2B41 amr 5._ 

- ~ * * - • • pickup, hr 4 r_*naina._rwr „e»>d, ; 33M VINTAGE CAR FARTS. REAR 


Full PARTS and SERVICE 

OPEN NIGHTLY TIL • P.M 
Monday thru Thursday 
SUNDAY* 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. 

382-6102 

D-0I344A 


rv a. jP lion. 595 

Ports - Accessories , s ~ft 7 

5 fOre ^fnrter writH Tyrol 


lion. 595-412*._ 

RANDELL TRAILER. 

0O4v *1,495. 


Coool* 
h 592-6775 


Hill area. Will flnenct. 


rrtd' MM WILL TAKE TRADE 

BSWii: *»••«. W3MA r_ MiFUANIAHID AOOM. uSSlSUP: 

FOR RENT; I97f VOLKSWAGEN ^ae dack Ffiandly Mobile pfeg-. \SH Y.nlng. y^B *.- 

Repairs — Rentals tSSS. 'Ji - - - Hr-“• ai-abtmisto to 

Van Tops Installed *—*■■ • v * >> *”*"*»• ? 4 » 4 * j-tedroom dw. Beauti«»i 

19S* VOYAGEUR 12' TRAILER, oark- Rets, ehlidrjn. and frlgnds 
stove, 2 way fridge, open to offers *£ !co l 7 ,, • L *??. e 
Asking *900. J85-C031, or 592 - 3540 . ,bile Ho(nes 1 DL 0I635A. 474 -J*»o. 

! Super Motors. DL 0084 A._WELL LOCATED S'NGLES. DCU 

14' TRA1L6R. 3 WAY LIGHTS, bias, '"‘both adult and family 

electric brakes, 3-burrer stove, ice arras of Hidden VaJJav. For ’ul 
MX 1 rnaca and flush toilet. $1350 ‘IJfojThailon cad Kt*th 478-6434 o r 
3rt-69»3. 478-CC34. Ad mi ral Ho mes Ltd. 

6 ~CAMPER 6 TTE"~SIDE CRANK ol ?iVATE CLEAN 17X50 / BED 
'“do as vu**tn sc/d^ns lots ot cuo* room. New dracts. Ip- 

‘carT cusnk^ efl . seeps l eludes washer and dryer No 

:$4-957S alter 6 . 908 Arcadia i -'-«’ 7 Rd , ®* nk ’ er ' rs 

- - —-- O.A.C. 3 * 8 - 5464 . No. 543 

117'/' SELF-CONTAINED TRAIL- - . 

;er. sleeps 6 , a^me conoitior CANTSEUJ.'* 

.S6-0/57. a'ter 6 or anytime week- L s , wjfh BQB ANGUS. Nat.o-a 

_____ Trust Real Estate, for ad.on 

TRAVEL TRAllF* SELF 1 *»•2576 Or 595-2121 


1 CLEAN. QUIET FRIOGE. 
I stove, Sink; older man, non- 
drinker. 1007 Johnson. 


6 * SS? # 6 . 1 4 t 0 ,Se 4 S n ^crj^d IfftS SlinIble**JS' .-frame ’with- axle, wood spoaa 

van body. Could be camoeriztd. *7C0- 1977 gmc CAMPERIZED VAN J « whaeis tires and fenders . Call 

very economic*!. 52400. No ° f,ers - 3W ‘ U3C _ [ __ ton 11X70 miias. nev. sink and 47*-946< 

«%&r:’Si£}*TAri3S. as sss. ciwiw y-tg..»yg»o«g.v & 

sgststwa <M ' «T»ir ■««»■ i«S 3 |f>srwsa « 

<8 POffl C»Mvik 4 ton. Ml, Vi, 5 norklnj conJl , mmac ulate camoerlzed 1973 Ecun roof 3*6-2567. _ _ 

and 2 trans, power steering , ollrf van ’ t# S,en ' NEWLY REBUILT 326 AND 

ne.v paint, only 52600 1976 FORD E150 PANEL VAN V 8 .1 ,ns,t, «- ^56-S070._ turoo ^ lt#g th#n jqq milB5 . 

«6 Ford caccver diesel J ton. headers side pipes, mags 1974 ,, 7 DODGE STREET VAN. can be seen running Otters 



complete with *' aluminum Crev Chevanne cemoer spec ai 


complete with 14' steel welding 
deck, aln poles, fuel tank, com 
r.artmenls, etc. .$3400. 


DODGF: STREET VAN. „$* 

silver no holes cut. 11.000 km. 595-5037 

BUMPER. 


treioM van body. $2600.' ' - *on V* automatic, power steer V'™ csotain? C ^rs, JirranW 

rst«#£yrt&, ix' Sfc.wsw*"*" au *' **“•- 


;« v ILV :r R GR c : cmp U y ' ' ?7 - a c '- 90 COMMERCIAL ’3 TON WS-1476. 

_ ,„n Vr. v « r complete with root racks and , P| . ... type 3 FUEL 

6 1 international Travelall. V*. au 1 ^^^ S ^ V ffl^A**& Wh. 16*0 milts. *5200. SJjjaiS 0 motor^ ci^U 2 8250 

■2X1 * cM d 0, e,c ' Wv 9000 a1 ' /v '" •“•»» h-ades _ _ . 

, 3*3-*v*5,_ after 5 p.m. DODGE AAAXI-VAN. 360 V4. 


-ape. *595. 

*! Ford cabover 4 ton. V* 5 and 2 — 


KEYSTONE CLASSIC MAGS. V»0. 

250 Kowasaki for parts.- 

for 63 Impale, 479-3674. __ 

AUSTIN CAMBRIDGE 


“ 3 trtVk' ver, nice condition power crakes, power ’ steerim'. J^u'xio^sriMsa f ' r 

M955. 4-speed standard, * new wide tires, «>aln . ^flore. ^4.300. 592 33 M _ 

■ Atiaa aluminum tandem end J5X00 mles. *6500. 384-1350 , 97 a ford 158 R AN G I . othM . 

,r 5'5*r' ne * aus * 1571 INTERNATIONAL HARVEST XLT. *»> r «> n »hg floor, rgdlais and 175 - ,VAjpy 0th9r Mr,i 

oanston. and hojst cylinder ,’’ 71 ™ V6 | 7 . • « lot more. 1200 kilometers. Will ->--«. 7 L___ 

cellant condihofh Just tested, 'cade. J87-S449._^_TWO FORD CHROME SLOTTED 

No reasonable otter refused 55 000 47 ** 79J __ _ *75 FORD *k RANGER. 4*8 V*- ; m , iV' )0d cond ,ton Mh 09 540 

01387A •" '•"MSs*.. —_ 1959 DOOGE ' * ton. 3il, i J aiutemKt^_ brakf^ dual -- 


FeBneH’s 


TK/ULKR SUPPLIES LTD 

PROPANE- REPAIRS 
/VND 

APPLIANCE service 

Custom Building 

and 

Van Conversion* 
Large Parts 
and Accessories Store 

652-3941 

Mon.-Sat. 9 to 5 
Sun. U to 4 

u4j 9 Patricia Bay H*>. 



386 3464 


V; 

Wir 


Rr-NT UNFURNISHED 

"LAUREL 

POINT" 

HARBOUR FRONT 
LUXURY 

CONDOM fN IUM5 
FOR RENT 

FROM 5500 to S6U0 
PLK MONTH 


• nr FA v r:u I NAILr- ^ ;cur --- - _ n 

contained, »ou«t showtr. fridge ^UST SELL: 24X40 3-BEDROOU ^P»ciOUB. --Brt pTtSUgt COD- 
.‘tove vitn ov*\.^ 3yway '‘Shts. can- j k i r t#d with *wo porches partially dominiums ane nosv avail- 
u ? vs?!»5. Front 246-437*. __ fends a oed Close to elementary ... ... t ,, n 

COMFORTABLE TENT TRAIL- and hign schools Otter* *»? ill?. eb! ^ ,u ‘ le,U - 171 9 p 

er. sieaos 4a. orooanw var. Tv ,. n aFaRrioMt i 2 x*s in quality aj»t«. contain fro^i- 
oood. condition. nefd„ca*. w.U Jjg, orlvateoark, Sie Can fre ,. fr.dK^. sed-cleamng 

|-win 44}^W4 »bw riw M»- mm distm-asher*. tn-auii* 

sau, ■«*«--WLMM—--..v. w.,n ivasbers and dryers. 2 

tOHfr,-sra». JJ. room, workshoo. and Itra# bed- Kiatlrrv^mc W*\V CafpetT, 


i AFOtlO 
1 OTTO 
BOLE* 

L ION* L 
WINNRBAOO 

^LaeTCRAPT, sunoowne* 

HOUDAiRE. LllS'JRECRAFT 
CANOPY TOR* - ACCBSSOR •** 

PATBAYMWV .SIONIY - ,, VJ _ 

*56-5504 MDL ;aa ceilent condition, fridge, stove and ,,, r e 

^ muu 2«ea ujua .eyiMi qa-uai-io 


_ _ jn, ngaid 

taka highest offer, 3*4-3236. 


i‘ TRAVELArRE TRAiL r «- r . is_ 

tagp * '* m _ 13X41, WITH DINING ! , ’ v ' ash€rs 

_ i room, worlcshoo, and larqe bed- bathPjOms 


23' NOMAD 


L0U67A 7434312 Mill Bay speed standard runs w*V tanks, fiberqiass canopy. Excellent ENGINE FROM 196* ENVOY 

BR A ND* ~ NgW 1972 R bT FORD ™ 

super suspension, dual anock- .'*>*572 ; 6 ford. 250, ^ TON, heavy radiators aharnaTors, ■Tc._^ay./i. 

n 9 , new Dana *0 oosi rear end. y V , DATSUN PICKUPTSPiriiff P'Ckup, i -speed. 37,000 miles, .VANTED MORRIS MINOR 1000 
« ^c N bK. K m^*P^| X er E ^ ^9-7623 alter 6 _ ';%{,£***”' *" ^ f ° nd '^ 1979 

n'trior, custom'skid qlate, * c ’ 90,00 Mdc ,0 1975 TOYOTA LANDCRUisER, 474 ' 17 J° -- Fully equipfied for year- 

oil bar and lights. Off-road tires, “hool 59«-7S72.___ ,33,000 miles good condition. //RECKING 7? SUPER BEETLE . Innludimr lint anti 

• jfor onemaif race Many 1973 MMY 4X4 SIERRA DE•l 0,, * r, 38"-3343 __ automatic, plus many otoer VVV round USE inclUOing hot anu 

_®: b0 ;., Awtkddvs luxe. all. options, 34,000 miles. As , 7 . nAT«;UN 4 X 4 ViCK-UP *5.000' p-rt5, <78 4*09 _cold «'8tPr 

_^ condition. Asking Vi900. Excellent shape, and mpg. low 1959 TOYOTOA CROWN DELUXE 

SPECIAL PURCHASE ! < 7, - 46 *»-_t mileage. Ken 3*5-6096. 4-door, auto., no rust, needs enqme 


WILL BE ACuE. __ 

Boox Tant Trailer Rentals NOW 


ALL R°ASONABLE Y OFFERS SOFT TENT 'TRAILER. SLEEPS 1 ^ 1, »<^ tton S 00 ^ riimtirv" and " halconic^ 

WILL BE ACCEPTED _ 6. *200. Phon# after 5 g.m 542-4289_ drapers ana oaiconip 

_ delightful home! 68 x 1 ? Laurel Point faciLiue* in- 

And A ' i,h , ‘ jr »9 tohdacaoed yard. 2 fire- c l..ri« own library, clulv 
st to .nt. lego oiaces. 4 aooi large dan edd’tion, • , , . 

st to ^e^iww morf! Buyrl9ht 474 - 2154 . ; room*. workshop. *wimmin 2 

c— hAWdtor j . this cant PB |EAT1 ~ I 400 ** sauna*, and un- 


ia/TapT OKANAGAN _ 


ST793 


4 ip 73 J2*00 6 or b2t 6 Jfer 3*r4*6* P CK BARGAIN, BRAND NEW 45 

gdoo , G 0 ^„r N 3.2 4 f 4jr ER,Z6D 


window vans with; V*. pewar stear- window van. Extra seats sooilers 
S*’ brakes, radio, highway and aide oioea. *4*00. 650-5505. 


• an conversions, sarvica" group condition, canopy, lust 
work, hotel or motel multi-purpose T ’ 8rt **' or * i 3 0 ^ 3 *<* 2 .* 0 ? > 


sm. 


- w- - w t i * pU* 

• enltle. Contact Mr. 0. Rh< 
i 86-241 1 o' 5950573. DL-49SA 

975 FORD XLf 4X4 CREW CAB. ,r#,fS 
sower steerIhg. power brakes, au- must" 
’omatic transmission, tfual gas jumn 
ranks, overload spring, cTple head- uj) 716-7597 
n t3y *sn c.ks VVM -- UtV - -** r 7 ‘6*759/ 

• 1 lent cor 

4/64916 


hodes. I964 
i «rea*. 

Irf ' - 


MOVING TRUCK R.UNS 
*l,*5t ' 


tested 900d condition. 3*2 44*2. 

,972 MAZDA PICK-UP, 

—oTinc condition. *1500. 656-3532. 


^.WG HARDTOP NEARLY NEW. 
oOOC ac-froster. included Reasonable 
offer* 592-1*95. 


Cons.der! 70 FORD 4X4, 340 4 SPEED, SUN * CMC HALF-TON ȣ.<,* 

, roof , asking *2*50, 612-3792, attar 6. v f ier 47 s ^832 


Part* - Accessories 

PROPANE 

All *t 

BOBS 


MOTORHOMFS—CAMPERS 
TRAILERS-CANOFY TOPS 
Parts and Accessories 
-REPAiRa— 

At install Hitches and 
Dp Wiring** 

NOW OPEN TIL 9 p m 
THURSDAY ANO FRIDAY cwt 
LOGAN-S RV SERVICE CENTRE ~ 
650 Burnside, near Douglas 

339-0213 _ ___D-002*7A 10R 

CUSTOM BUILT CAMPERETTE 
for 8' box, >leePi 2, dinette, sink. 

12 pal. water tank, stpve counter 
space cuoboords. lop an* bottom, 
tols ol storage for its sire, boat 
r-ads m roof, prooane approved. 

Great for hunting, fishing and 
musi be lean. Phone 


47 7-44*3. 

32' MOTORHOME UNIQUE 
wall made, a must to j 

Goidstrgam. 


f* r Sw%i 5 Xi derground paridns 

parks . *7000. Buyrlgnt. 474-;iS4. > 

r equipped'’*2,SDO^or MOBILE HOME 40X14. 2 LARGE 
5 3603 bedrooms, large patio, storage 

shed, 2 carports. On city route. 

3*2-5974. 


MOBILE HOME* 
AND PARKS 


_ _ _ _ M ____ MOBILE HOMES LTD 

SELL 1971 FORD TANDEM 1 SUBARU. BRAT 4X4, 197*. *5 000 J 94 O FORD MOTOR, MODEL A Crease 586-^"- 

truck, exegMant conditior 0 r closest off-r. 38S42II Fqrd running gear 47I-076J r 


Fofd running gear 4784)763. 

&TS- v* v.N nS33NT co«E|{a?SISBl^"iiSin M,LE5 ti’&Xl ” v!>,;ks '** 5en 

a ' ,wo - e ‘" ar »» «* """ owt ..TON van! shout 03tlY p 0 » cmni.n-,m 

cK5—577c— n~rn —.... ---- box. it>any extras. 382-3734 oickoo truck huocaos. 656-58^* 

sa&tfc s&jvsfijs:. ™o* 


DL 1)0-114A 


campim,. 

RENTALS 

Off-Season Rates 

RESERVE. NOA‘ 

PEDEN R.V. LTD. 


47C3024. 350, 4 * S0e9<,/ m9l>V 11L000^85f06T4»’8-855*. " I oltor*. 452-5491 


Only 14,000 mlles,~Askina 
Will trade tor I-9 'j' camper of 
'dual value and condition. 477-42*3, Chev uanai 
after 5 e.m 4,'8-0163 


I 


*250, 


. ___ ...extra part*, inder, 3-aoeed, $618. 

d'ferjj.nv- _ 4,'8-0143 _ _,'72 FORD PICKUP i <-TON, *1100'SELL 'I 

.HAVING TO/.'. ' . V,'/ WESTPHALIA CAMPER 1 or offsas. 4740410 C *08._ 

S35B0 ^See'at^l79 TrarfiT S Road*anv C 9««! • nd Con<,,,ion Drion * i»74 If TERNAtFoNAL VTON, ; 46 CHEVELLE 2-DOOR SEDAN 

\3500. see at *79 Transit Road any 74*-/32* foor f#ur SDeetJ s37i0 front #r>d #nd w2 .jii 4 . 


L, 6 CYL-' WANTED: 1965 AM BASSADOR 

13* 4 needing work. 479-3479 _ 

•69 MARQUIS FOR PARTS 


'■me. Bernle. 

„ 1977 CHFVY VAN. 10.080 MILES | 

FOR SALE - 196* MERCuPY call for daMtlU 479 1»2 or* 
: ton 6 -c/Hnder o.rkup y.'!*h 03 /js u> 

itiie^otfer a*rSrTt ls*vour*^l79U 304? f < |>MC M 8 , V* AMNDOW VAN 
- - - — qood conditon Asking 53900 To 

U FORD .BRONCO. 302 AUTO ' view 1050 Guaens 

tfSB • •»» -0*C VW« CYLINOtR 
479-5355 ' oufomatlr. ^lean good condition 

x * a*ter» 6 , 3*8-4646 

=49 KdNWORTH LOGGER. NI ~ 

sraoe, re built 335. new rubber on ^ CHEVY VAN. FULLY CAM 
truck, with Otdar Page frailer hen*ed. loaded with extras. S4.40C 
478 1294 479 5214 

8 FORD 250~ V* AUTOMATIC. '« 7 9 DATSUN PICKUP. DELUXE 
®.S.. P.B . dual tanks^Nu apo <-§h. P*r*ect condition. • Must be 
miles, r Security camper 56800. told. 598-7372. 

V.n^Motors 74IJ780. DL 003I8A , 4 r0RD COuRlt R wiTh r ' AN 

974 GMC 4 CREW CAB excgltent condition. 5J30C 

special dual battery and 5 * 2 ' 7 


15B 


TIRK& 

NEW 


64 FkiRLAINE SPORT COUPE 
289 not in car, otters, 383-3760 

VOLKS BUSH BUG. TRAILER, 
licenced, tow bar *150. 477-/034 


!«■» AITO KF.PAIKS. 
SKKVK E and TOUINIi 


RAVEN RV's 

van Cgnvgeaions 

tavan Traiiar. 

equipped. 

Reg *5795.CO 
NOW *4995.00 

4/9-3178 

1971 DODGE HALF-TON VAN * . .. „„„„ „ ^ 

cylinder automatic. .3,000 milts, j-f^uy tight, presently pulled bv a 6 
insulated, carpeted, icebox, win- CvUn ^ r voivo. Must be seen to 
Dund&n S 90 ° ° H aivpreclate Many axtras *5.500 


72 PREMIER 12X44. LARGE SUN- 
, deck 12x20 addition, metal shed 
1 w, private adult section 
47f-3646-_ 

THREE-BEDROOM MOBILE 
nome in attractive Sooke oark. 
j 54S-5/39. _ 

WANTED; MOBILE HOME AS 
down payment for duolex. Phone 

Don't delay any longer in viewing 5 ?*' 7y !?-—-- 

Ylitoria s newest luxury concept in’LANNON CREEK. SOOKE, 3 
modem home Itvlnal Only 11 sites uedroomi 4 appliances ju.oot 
eft end oohq fasTl Hdnes coma *4'/-5u33 479-4828. 

complete with skirting, decking,, ,, 1 .^-, ■ ^- 

sn#d landscaping, and much WEEKEND SPECIAL. DRIVE BY 
morel Drive by 1498 Admirals Rd. No. 49-2500 Florence Lake Rd and 
6-8 e.e« or 1-5 Sal-Sun and talk to mana an oPer. 478-0666. 



TWIN OAKS 


satsPMiv 

PROflHTOS ITD7 HEALTOW 

“VIEWING BY 
APPOINTMENT ONLY 
iaM GILES 386-3 V2A 
AKTER HOURS 
John Speers, 385-75G1 


S^ el - R#(, . 0 L.i oc9t ‘ on ,. < ' 


DOGWOOD TRAILER SALES 
prRTS - PROPANE 
WESTERN WILDERNE6S 
Campers 

WILDERNESS KOMFORT 
Trailers 

2630 Devi lie Road 
Highwa 1 at MiHitrearn 
8*841 DL~ 


^2744 Voencer PRIVATE LOT, WITH OR WITH- 
1 (corner of Trim. Can.) Mon, o«t mobila horn#. 382-5034 anytime. 
Tr.urs. 96. Frl., Sat, 9-6, Sun. 12-6. einht~Tuimx^ 

For further 'n«orm*t: C n phone. BuV "w. Home* 

Buy Right Heme* Ltd 474-2154 


LISTINGS WANTED 


474-2155 



7L-OQ421A 


1976 23' EUROPEAN TRAILER 
complete with side tent. 3-wev 
^ fur- 

esoe 


vw Itirigic 9»MM giui w- 

fridge, prooane stove and 
nxrer sleeps 5. This trailer Is e 


: l* 4 ™ ...! j8 795° : _ ' BUYING OR SE1JJNG 

12' VOYAGEUR TRAVEL. TRAIL- M > VANGUARD CAMPER For # sinctra Interest In 
surer deluxe inedel with fiberglass needs call: 

*— *—1 fridge, r-- -* "“** “ 


CERTIFIED mechanic will 9 f. 2 -way tndge. very clean, muat «. Jre r deluxe medel with fiberglass needs call: _ 

do any car repairs tor low price sell: Soe or bast offer 1666 t 00 . 3-wav fridge, range with ovan, t—1002 Goidstraam Ave., Victoria 

work guaranteed. Valve grinds for McRae Ave i; u sh toliqt and shov.er pressure Victoria 474-1288 Mill Bav 743-5564 ■ «k« k irate*\i ami moVRII 

V-8, S2B0; 6 cylinders »18C l cyl on pq O SPECTOR~MARDT0P * 5,er 12 volt battery iacks and 24 hours - DL01635A ,W liUV 1 A>U BU VKU 

inder' *125 VVt. *150. including dmq pttoSPtciUK 4 nrooane ''C-downs, usad only * wee*s. - 1 - - - 

Stove, spara firewood' condMtoa ** _i HOMES, VICTORIA 


7-7225 attar *. 


•a /SSJT^SS. «Li "o' '• on '' i*“ V* >» fiqw. *NO ui 


SUBURBAN 1? 3 
ranger, automatic. 
.>ower brakes, etc. 
'78-9X1. 


_1__over I camper canoov. Running 

i TON.' 9 PAS-! order,_*275. 388-/747. _ 

JK^gf A , *y l . < g' '71 VW WESTPHALIA CAMPER. 
Oftors-te *3,150. 8 C00 on cl# ,„ 


,- _ . - . iry or 

: *43X. Otters or trade. 592-0947 

full F ca5£»v V 24 OMrtoma?'m! 75 TOYOTA- LANDCRUISER. 
™iLA a C?%9n 4 'f22.9soa 01 mi,9,,, cell>nt condition J88-44H ft 
Otters to *I8X! 656-2309 _ A} * j or Drew. 


FibreglossrRadiais 

BY 

GENERAL 

Tuhelesk - Whitest all 

Priced As Low As 

S4G.89 FOR BR 7S-13 
AT 

D&D TIRE 

1690 BLANSHARD *od'v,'<37'Beta St-^choneiiv^ 19 47 MERCURY PICKUP. 54^80 “u-^Swi VWT ' 

I O^U DLAINjnnlM/ -Of 84 *094. Located- behmd th# , f73 fW Tripte-E camper. ‘ - 

382-7283 ?lon n,,d * PBV * nd b * V * G ” Both ‘or *4000 . 479-590*. 7? HOLIDAY RAM 

| PAIR LIKE NEW 1/5-13 SNOW _ MIDTOWNE M6T0AS 


Triendltf 

^Mobile Thames 


tout Had 
maMcarnEm 

IM TOURIST IT* COOK ST. 38*7324 

ac commodation CAPSTAN COURT 
630 Head St. 

'Hits \* a auiet, adult build¬ 
ing clc^e to buses and «hojj- 


NEAR CITY CEJ9TRF 
HARTNELL HOUSE 
1»4 YATES ST. 

Reesonabi* Daitv and Week'y 

Rates 

_ 3«J-« 7 f 2 39*-38i2 -_j n _ a few suites avail- 

craigmylS GUEST Mouse Controlled entrance 

Enpiisn Style bad and breakfast. ^ Wc - L^nirnuea entrance 
Da.lv, weekly rata* available. BaU oniPk. wall to wall, 
or 5»s-2697. -- - Phone 38WW83 

:t88-T324 


sa 


t?95.* includ'no oartj. Call 383 6686 

REPAIRS AND 1 SERVICE sllwo* 6 *. s^ova T ^cebox^ R ftrn^c« Camper 

a^>aJ»L- 


2(35 Trans Canada Hion Or iysf oiatn hred ^snopomfl #no LAUREL POINT 


Dujglav 382-6102. D 01346A. 


emergency-I-I _I_ 

Special tales for 77 v.lNI MOTOR HOME. - 

Old Age Pensioners *14.900, C l., T.V. antenna, 4-oiecra FOR SALE BY OWNER - 197* M(II11 _ 


--;-- - - r - — -- , imTratiy 213S Trans Canada Hlah y r iwsi Piam urea o >> 

- 77 DODGE -4 tON 44U. ONLY wav. vfdorla, B-C? 14x60 ^Bgndlx. Monthf rest? 

, 21,000 km wijh 76 11 tt. Falta 2-cedrooms. stove, fridge, carpet- hom*(RecuperatingM 
, Camper including iacks, fridge, inj and drapes August special - 6 nd . 

furnace .toilet, only $11,960. Coast SI/,9V 3 -.4*70 Manco 3-btdrooms. I ,N / 1 °e R ^Ti9 N u ; 

line Traitor Centre Ltd, 3X8 fully furnished, deluxe throughout _GLENSHIEL Ht-- 

August special — *22,995. |1 00ij OA|/ RAY fUT5T SLSAN OT JACK Bt 11 ', 

dlecount on an homes .n stock $JAK BAl LxLt.J»l HOLifc. . r7 'mwc.ojui 
until the and of August. DL-0166SA. Pleasant accommodation in Oak $<**804-. JtoqUL 


DLIj8**W!> 4I-BDRM UNTI 

Y'uil 


aitoppt- 

^Our'locaiton sea v,eM ‘ s - fil ' e P 1;ue - 

Idige terrac'd. Lpas« a\ a li¬ 
able. Oilers. Pleaee call; 


*34*64 


RAWIATOR MEPA1K5 FAS' - 

quality repairs at Maurices Ayto ^-^l 5 . 7 


mlieaoe. Power plant, awning. 

. 1 18 volt air, ate. Phon# 


Bav. 

asr 


...... ... Oak 

Excetiant home cooked Swinarton Stewart Clark Ltd 
One olock from Marine REALTY WORLD g 

and Sea land. Apply 1052 1 - -—“ 


— dual tanks. HO volt air, site. Phone hX)R ONLY $12 930” Dr™a and SMtond ApotvlOsl, — 

4000 iu-Wl -Daiuxa ModuMn# Lamplighter’' BS3orffl e.y8 Sb AK* V 12 .^ Ja,ME S ^ LUXUt^ioF v 

72 HOLIDAY RAMBLER 31 FT - Immaculate t2'x*0‘ 2-Bdrm CRAIGMYLE GUEST HOUSE ^Sireund ■ 

A»n tr #i! cr ' Mm * Ciost in |73 p#rk rtnfai Ootn to *JI aaeb maaiir twi Aviil#t> , a now Aln ?*c<S f tu 

mo.- 0, £?K.. r , oom ' “ ,our Tv in comer suite avail, sipt. 


d v C ou ,^o D -C 


' 9ri V ?L!£ W t GEN ' ^ p O RD C R EW CAB. »i-TbN! gbit. MS-4734. 

eu ’ lrk M?tUr "" , ONE c|jE«Te« CONCOXBE «?!¥ 

_ • —- - —-tlxISLT. Partially used, with new , 

966 GMC '1 TON WITH 1 TON 1974 DODGE B-200 CUSTOMIZED. I white snoke rfm Good spare for 

raar frame and stake bo*, good and many axtras. Must sail.* Ford or Jeep 479-6514. 

5h9 «L*^_ 0r ^ 0Mer 652 7 51 - *£*“• _rvuo SUPER CHARGERS L40-I5. 

1975 20>0 INTERNATIONAL. 12 '4j FARGO WINDOW VAN, NEW* n ttolt ET Rims. Unlluq $100* 
yard dump truck, with work fires and starter running, otters, Aeekdavs only. 478-42*0. nights, 

4 7*-9361. <5*49? 1.__ .I74T041. 78-77*0. 

SACRIFICE, 71 FORD J7 TON,) 74 o/VC VAN, 3*,000 MILES : G 50 CONCORD ET RAC-AC 


j VANGUARD MOTOR HOME 
12 ' 000 ml, *‘ s,ovt frt 8p«* Itoater. 
S0AAB follft. **,700 3*4-4936 after * p.m 


r, TV antenna. Coastline — Huge tilf-ou* living room 
— Her Centre. 33** Douglas. 3*2- — Fridge stove, washer, dryer 
610? D-01346A — Private lawn, garden patio 

-— Cash or terms arrange- 1 

-or 3*3-51 


477-77* 

"TRADE 


iS?4 


diring roo 
c-onge. S9S-S411 

r-n* TWO WORKING'GlRLj"TO 


view 


r'SSf tr 1 

located. 3*3-36 X. ca(| Jj 4 .st 30 . 


.m».». r~m±_ a-M, ta . t> - ^rss^'Wfi'rHrsaa: sact &.vsu ^ « c .*w*- « s _ rtf . kl _ AI ^ 

.... - . - - RENTALS 

' S 4*u4* “, 7 : s,; 

-uTitu } • *»«» r oomv new carpeting 0 uv ™ w 1 M 1 G h^ 

♦ 'vpugnout. Stove ‘ ' ----- - - - - - - 1 - 

irry v w w viwv" . ...... wvw • ur»*# -"v-uwe* » •> • jnt #00 4 (tfflr Itokl 

oainL Refxjllt engine. Exctl'ent nnounted snow tlr«* 52 000 miles, cuoancy 47*-teS4 
cundWon. $3,800 59,-6515 after 5. 54,695. -77-9)39 _ 

„»eSTOFFER LIONEL Deluxe'TENT'TRAIL- 0 fSra LE B..utitJny“ ioc.T^ 2 oed" 

22' motor home. 3 burner stove, 3 wav fridge, doublew.de. stove, fridge, wall to 
_ * sink; furnace, sleeps 7, 1 year old. wall, draoes. sundeck, por^n iand- 


1BA 


economkai"*, graat”cond1tlon. ask-; teauiHuilv ’customTzed" "stereo.’ ’un* tires, only TOO - 'miles,'* new 
n 3 *2600, 3*4-2653. much more. 54900. 3*3-6318. would cost over *TJ0 Sell for *100 


..^^raalr. 3*4-9100 r\Jl$ cTm wLiikTv" km axTTct tci 1 ',ott «” T aa»v"'unl non Lr 99 , ‘ A<,ul1 } mlles, r~~ . ~ - - - 1 room suites ever 

ow. .no P.J.IW, ».ooojy« TOP CLEAN CARS «—wciw* t sf l »Ht C0 3fe , r* iStl” t” “t 1 " .'7!_Sgww-L-_ 

. ^^iSfh^.ae.. <8V»' 47»->W9 eufntoo*. , LUXURIOUS ^irr2S ^721^1 SEA V(£W FROM LARGEES- 

oxuj 174 19 M ,T0 *’ M,nroom * 1C ” -r— 1 -'-12x6* with iivinq room tip-out. l A,t#f 5 ® ^•ekdavi, qu<n ^H 2 bedroom 2 betnroom 

52 i“j_ 47 LJ^:---- *W" SEAGULL OVERHEAD bedrooms, raised dining room. 3*3-6 »a _condominium, near marina, adult 

GALAXIE *'CABOVER CAMPER camper stove, oven, .cecox, toilef* very attractively located. Close lot STUDENT ACCOMMODATION, i oriented, now available. *295. 
sink stove, icebox, lacks. *1495. earning «nd lacks. 81495.,belJtvgjgtoMJlofong two brooms. prUm bath and 1 ^ 77 -098? after 4. 


CARS AND TRI CKS 
w UTBD 

TOP DOLLAR 

FOR 


bar. best 


wheels, 

1 *2-3216. _:_| miles, *5400. 3*5490*. , - - - - - a --- 

74 VW W 6 STFALIA CAMPER, IN j 71 VAN GOOD CONDITION ' — < 1 <■' a 

/#ry good condition. *5495. or bast must be aoto. Leaving country 1 TWO ET MAGS. TA RAIALS. 
oHar, 479-218*._I Best offer. Pnone^T 3*47539 ! Uto on# summer. *225 or offers. 

'970 FO'RD VAN 302 AUTOMAT-1* 7 # • CHEVY VAN, BLACK, NEW “ * * ’ 

[c, oeneUad.. $2 000 or offers. Be- 0 < jinf. mags, TA 50, fleres, spoiler. 


OKANAGAN CAMPFR. 

new condition. jacks. n»«i*r, 4/B-6jaa on oouoie wiat mooue homa 74x40. on UVlc bus rout# si« 3«i’.9«A]' ^ warANT 

tr.daa. etc . *2295. 478-0041 im uw ' i 4 ~”wlru 3 . bedroon^s new carpeting 00 UV ' C 604 r0vr * 38^-9*63. HIGH OUADAA. 

ml' ® aarafe’S: -u!F?a3s^ 

-, j ara^Ptton* 477-4211. ■ ..Ifridot stov# neat, water, came 

SACRIFICE. REST OFFER LIONFL rf)ELU«E TENT TRAIL- S 8 S. L IL Ml ®, 6 rkSS’ j -I? FOR VOUNG.WORKJNO WAN OR MCIMM.. ««.!!"•'• "• 

travel In comfort 22' motor home. 3 burner stove, 3 wav fridge, doublewide. stove, frldgr wan iu — 

3*2-6510 Sink,* turnace. stoeos 7, 1 year old. wall, draoes, sundeck por.h land BFACON HILL PARK AREA AND 

479-8039 scaped in Sea-Mountain view Len- |h 3 ROOM s' TO RF.NT James Bav bachelor 1 and 2 bad- 

non Creek Adult Park. 2 miles *' P room safes avaitoUe Seo« 1 st 

- - a-af «: ^ r gnt» from H70-S220 Adults. "# 


RENT NEW DELUXE MO* 


tween 5-* p.m. 592-2059. 
vamfsTcamper VAN, FULLY 

jssiwar 


:^^^ DC W- V A N 

nSMXl. 


1974 CHEV ’? TON PICK-UP. 
tandard, A-1 condition, low mltp 
age. *24*. 479^9*6. 


RUCK 

1236. 


1964—73M KG INTERNATIONAL 
fridge, fraeier truck, for sale or 
lease. 3*5-4992. 


iuih°«V, E 2-?4x7. D7014 * 300 G |r‘ 3tu0 DoUgltth 
offers . 477-073\ ^FIts Dodoe. __ 

FOUR GT*?^ US MAG*. 

C 596-04*3 


Contact: 

HKUCTJ LOC1\HAKT 
COR NELLrCH^V-OLDi 


380-5777. J 2!^!L 


5P6R camper stove, oven, icebox, tolIff,* 1 vary attractively located. Close 1 o|«tudent 

„ w . ^,-fr .fr i.cu. ,mR KS- 

cnanl 1 i> TP All CO* IMSIILATSB AMO' 01635 A 474-12*6_ #56-835 


74 BRONCO'SPORT. 4X4, RADIO, V ^ S W*GEN CAMPER 
oower steering, power brakes. Vi, wbogt. Mi. 477-6*75. 


73 FORD ,l j-TON, 360 4-SPBED. 

Sa. n C X l °4R.m. , * , ‘ ” ^ 

5, CM iL u J.V^: i >..„, CHivT v « 


VAN 


wheel. Mi- 4*7-4* ! _ 

CHAMPION WAINS FOR VOLKS- 
wagen, U5.jr7* 990*._ 

4 B 60X13 TIRE*, 
condition, *100. 592-1 

IM PABTS. kbtMOlIKR 


i’. 1 ^*«i,ifc T 6»i$' WPY ' “■ m 7t?sa. C oNbi.Tiiii ptCKUp i ixf! r pop ,M - 


van. $14*. or bast offar. 


1973 GMC 34-TON PICK-UP. VI, WANTED: GM 10 BOLT FINNED 
$2,600. 642-4297. aluminum dlft. cover. 652 4856. 


$ 500. ra77-*049. ~ ' wall, naid* paint.'*1315.1*2-3676 

7r 7 QMC VAN, LOW MILEAGE, 19*2 FLATHEAD FORD tg-TON 

ofton, 59T *—| — 


1 truck. Offers to *400. 4712IU4. 


WANTED: __ 
seats tor Trans Am. 


,r&n , , UCK6T 




V-* MONZA REAR 


CASH 

isnwsvHBAaeN 

GARDE ^CITYAGTO SALES 
_ 2971 DOUGLAS 

cAwF iB^ , » c t ; 5 

ESQUIMALT AUTOMART LTp. 
l* Esqulmalt 3*2-?l' 


| 14' TERRY. r SLEEPS 6. '70 FORD 1 J.-" . TR AILER. INSULATED AND 
tm4m *.ith hitrh. into, lightweight fridge '3-wev). stove. 


Torino, with equalitor hitch, 
3*6 -7904, 

CAMPER. fLEEPS 5. STOVE, 

8*00 


4 BEDROOMS 


waik-ln toilet, heatsr, sieeos 2. Double wide, in country settino, 
- suits retired. *3500 . 881 Glodioia. saclout kitchen-dining eras. 

. s' l. . w Large iivinq room. Hai good tu- 


ROOM TO RENT IN PRIVATE 
home. Students. No drinking or 
smoking. Shore kitchenette. 2616 


,, jXM.LiX_T.M 34 J^IL. 



ROOM. WALKING 
mt open for rent It 
1157 Johnson St. 


197? KUSTOM KOACH. If j' SELF 24 - w „ - - 

WANTED: CENTURY^ HARDTOP | M'^hone 1^4®07. cond,,lon ^ •'JVroi?^ g* •Sad^’Idi!!!^ ** 

f parkins, privacy^, moral 99 * "T*’* *' 


3*2-7195 | tent traitor, good condition. Carey — 

WILL PAY CASH FOR AU-1 9d ~ ,ry . -New "nito avaltobto? in'tjrga and 1 

tomobitox, any make. Pleas# Call h ?'3 HOLIOAY TRAIIJR. COM- | »malt sixes. 112 - 245 - 3311 . r WANT A GOOD C 

at 253* . Government Street or I pietoiy equipped. 479-7392 ■- - - n . T - ’ M J T y : A double wide tor Jha 


hongji3-74*.8907, 
RENT-A-MOTOR* HOME 


2538 < 

» 385-0 


WANTED - AUSTIN 
br’dae, automatic, latest 
Please. 656-4207. 


I pjetely equipped. 

'1970 DATSUN QALAXlt, CAMP-173 wESTPHALTA' "" CAMPER Homes. DLQliliA. 474-12 * 8. y 
tr #M axlras Inc luded. 3*6-1175. |mult nil, *5500. 38646/7._TRAILER PARK 

I T. ' “ m Z. J I .V. _ J r mmJb I AArtnlhNj ixjInOae rafaa o,!ll Na ia* al. 


USED R.V. AND BOAT HEAD- 


WANT A GOOD DEAL? k;,' c , 
1 double wide tor Ihg price of • .211' 
ingle wide. Franklin stova, sepa- CLE 


FORD VI, -4 TON PICK-UP. 1 72 FORD ‘1 TON. 360 AUTOMAT-! DIRECT CONNECHON 340 ELEC- j ’72 OR NEWER ? TON PICKUP, HARDTOP TENT 
</*-935*. lc. *2130 . 477-3551 1 tronlc distributor. 652-4166 » cylinder automet.c PS. 477-4537 equipment tor tfU 


Der^, hardtop or 1 conv]rtlDle, 0 must ' FOR RENT? HARDTOP T ENT j HARDTOP TENTTRAIl.fR. «500' rai 

be In good condition. 471-3464 , J trailer per week, 477-5900 0 ^ t«t otter 479-7747._f*J $ ^ T ^ r C itv Vktorfa C« 


kitchen. 382-8375 

CLEAN 
bachelor, 

652-U74. 

CLEAN FURNISHED RC >M. 
Cook-Quadra area. 7tl 3»5. 
3*6-046? 


MOST LADIES, RETIRED FOLKS 
block, spacious bachelor so'tee. 
*139, next to park, on Esqulmalt 
Rd Oct. to». 3S3-«T74, 3*2-1234 . 

ALL LADIES' BLOCK, 1 Bf'O- 
room, wail to wgtl shag, bet cany, 
close to Woodward s, bus line, 
8187- Oct- 1st, 3*3 4774, »1 Q4 . 

CLOSE IN, 1 OR ? BBQMOM 
hastment suite, private entrance 
200, a^fWtmtlet included. 175423* 


COMFORTABLE ROOM FOR OAK BAY; MOOERN BLOCK, 
oyiet man, 1409 Cemoaun. snaring bedroom suite, ryi*, drape*, hydra 


No pats. Available Oct. 


. TRAILER AND 
sate 471- 3640 


Wffi?, 2233 lowiker , 593 1)67 
2 BEDROOM APARTMENT T 0 
rant, avaltoOlt Saot. 15th. Esqui- 

mait area. 3*5 -s5h. 

DOWNTOWN 

Brloht clean un# bedroom apart 

{lSS - auTrr—FuISiiSep 25 ?. 

Near Jubiiaa. Kitchen pivl- ■ BACHELOR SU 


'leges Men 597-661 •>' 


_ _Tt • AVAILABLE 

now Mature adujtj onlv 3*5-3257 


... a- 













































































































































































































- 


JfHt ArAHTMF.NT* TO 

KK.NT 1 NM RMAIItll 

Waterfront 

"DREAM 

HOUSE" 

OPEN SAT 1 30-4 
2040 NEPTUNE RD 


ArARTMFAT* TO 

ii i yr mrvmntm*n 

Rent 

Something 
Better. .. 


M AI* ARTMEMTT TO 
IlKNT imiNRHED 


m» AFARTM1.NTR TO 
RENT UNFUHNIMIKD 


APARTMENT? TO 
RENT ttmiRNfSHED 



PROfWmCS LTD./ REAITOH 

I 1 VM Quadra $t. 386 3124 


Several luxury apartment! 

Ti i d tvl r \cr u\A/v are being ottered tor 

I UKIN KJt-r nWY rfnt at STADAOONA 

AT LANDS END CENTRE ~ A unique opp- 
RD.. RIGHT ON ort uiutv or people ho would 

PIERS TO NEPTUNE J? * WB ‘ brt ' 

$159,000 must|_ e 

C C I J R D I W r L cr> * u,ie W,U1 n n University opening AN*e to buses 

J c , D I 1 1 \j t«ta and drapes, spacious and downtown Special rates with 

OFFERS 1 closets, outside balconies ‘ ‘ 


•THE APARTMENT 
SPECIALISTS' 

TOWNVEEW APTS. 
946 Balmoral Ave. 
v FURNISHED OR 
UNFURNISHED 




TneelaDe HstaJes 


m 


FIRST CHOICE IN 
APARTMENT 
RENTALS 

REDWOOD 

PARK 

(15*. 157 Gore* ltd C.) 


-MW APARTMENTS TO 
RENT UNFURNISHED 

TARA PLACE 

1039 VIEW ST. 

NOW 

RENTING I 

na tarot. well-dts toned bachelor 
■>u<tts, ctntrtlly located. Balconies, 
beautiful landscaping with large 


t»l APARTMENTS TO 
RENT FURNISHED 


DAILY COLONIST, Victoria B.C , Saturday, September 2 ,ISIS ^ j 


I tM DtPlEXES TO RENT 2IB 


MONTHLY 
WEEKLY 
■ DAILY 


SEAVTEW DUPLEX 
Sootoe Harbour 
30 Min. to Town 


HOI SES TO RENT 
I N FU RN ISHED 


, Modern, around floor 
•00 so. ft. with If— 




to P*rli«™m JWja. II. ll»rn«toom j |*£ O R O 0 M 

•ge tor local ceils) colour 4^ '- eluded S37S per month. 383-07*4 

'•». pool, games room an* watar suftaoto tor teacher or ; —-n—— --- 


charge tor local cells) colour f7 ti •\ h S** v - ^ 

•aunts pool, games room, coin •°* Suitedie tor teectx 

eundry. utilities ! professional cdtooie. lltS oar 

THE ROYAL SOOT INN 


room, rumpus i 
$500 . 4774)15). 


beautiful landscaping - 

oatio in raar of building, un- 
'dtrground perking, 4-pcg 
; bathrooms, laundry facilities, col¬ 
ored epoiiances, tennis practice 
Area, controlled entrance. Inquire 
dally, 11 e.m. to 7 p.m,, M3-1833 


(HHH_|_Jto. ( ~E SO UIMALT WOLLASTON 

Avail. Sept. 1. 2-bedroom modern home. Close to 

425 QUEBEC ST, I *°" TAQUE c * jj&, 5 *' 

PH ONE 36»64<>S j QUADRA ^^^4, - u* bathnama. 

— - T -— — i Immediate Occupancy den,,,' JshS^SSLJ 

| Cosy one bedroom tri-plex. Includ- 1 *410 

, ,rio *« •»* “ ov *- * 195 °« r 1 2 BEOROOW\ HOUSE GORGF 

i l i\f t c d*v area, stove, fridge, carpets, close 

J.UlLb HAl | to school end shopping. No pets 

I Now 2 bdrm townhouso. Large J $350 . 479-4455. 

to'ourcnese 0 P m LM! * " °° ,l0n EXCLUSIVE COUNTRY HOME 

fW ■An vfllje. ___ Mi,,. IA 1 


Cn 

°0 CARWAI 


On the Ocean 


, clooptx. outside balconies; ,’ pets welcome f fcWV _ Dl I NJQAAi 11R UAI KP 

386-3231 388-6275 fn £f B# ... ref ?* e . ratorB 10 m M0N ™ - 0NE 

PAGBR 461 J 
ETHEL 'HARVEY 


*®r** Avo^, furnished 1 bad -1 Pty>ne Audrey at SAEC 308-4141 or D * u * Nl acres. 3 bedroom, two batn 
suHes (TV not Included) SRim 124 hrs ) or • and two fireplaces, also barn for 

2t5 Per month, buUdlnfohtV! =Z5LI2IL!I*±- horses, $325. 842 3743 after 4 p.m 

&??!.»» «*«*• OCEAN VIEW fcsTwa.ii ' . ... 


from $2$: 

1 tMT 0- ..... __ 

^i'« elease call 388-6*59. 


$240 


MARG PRICE 
BLOCK BROS 
REALTY LTD 



GARY EDEN 38V2C45 '— Qtd Dlttg? Why ^ 

ranges with Continuous A . . rneKe your sprino move toe! _ , ... _ . 

oven., di.hw.sher, 1015 KINGS *1*!* ™*?* v|eKf| ., fcf*,JSSR. 

Ortier features Include iWk, . < ^*c l «a «w pWTWtSK , ££*£«« ^JS&JSTikSISSff CSSt' WE OfTm 

(.Jtlier features inclUue Kyj| d ing that is close to town Estates. Why paV rent tor e hole- a i.< v on m two-bedroom suites *»L Or f Ot 

fantastic rooftop gardens and on bus route, i min. walk to jyMgMH today ^en yju could Trom $2-25.00 and $2$5.oo, he*t >■ - Harbour Views 

«iih walkways, pools, fine °SJ |^ a a Pl ““ c *" * , ' M ” 0 ' -Baautilul Large Suiie. 

wood and brick everywhere . broad loom, (tocoratlve dreoes, andi month, on# badroom - tomoo-gw? -AdulU Only 

, . , .SarLTSTfle ml- jreelane Estates ELLERY 9 uiet Atm,«phe,e 

Indoor swmmunz port., to vfEw call 0 *»v eden , Resident Manager 3«M943 

sauna, svnrlpool; tudor 11- 1 A* 4 * ist in i™ior dMiSn ! uJttthe APTS 


brary, tudor lounge and rec- j 
reation room. 


J8J-2U45 

OR 

JOHN SPEERS 3*5-7581 


KXJttUKE 


Deluxe 1 Bedroom - fire | 


GREENWOOD MANOR 

1255 Yerdier ;_ 

(BR.ENTWOOD) 


Treelane Estates 

103-105 Gorge Rd., features the lat¬ 
est In Interior design, up-to-the 
ml.nute .amenities, controlled 
access, color co-ordinated kitchens 
and baths, brand-name appliances _ 


v , T . _ , , , ft§TCH 

Huge new 3 level deluxe duplex In » 

near downtown r^,;, c s ^r , rS’’;sj m 1 .°s;°s 1 ^ _ I 

MONTHLY * *<» ft * Available Sept 1st, $435 3 BFOROOM HOUSE. wait 

WP’FTfl V r»A it v R J?*.S 0# Development Corp.. basement. Close to Seers schools 

Wfc,C-KL.x DAILY 442-5254. , and buses. Available now. Children 

Newer btock with specious fully kieta , rv». .. ’ war 1 ,'. C na^; A ' ., welcome. 592-7753. 

furnished su tes Color TV iman NEW DELUXE 3-BEDROOM DU- i --——--- — -- 

and disnes sunolied Pl«- Pridpe, slove end dishv.ash-I OCT. !$T, 3 BEDROOM TOWN- 

HARImuLL HOUSC « Quit! street near ocean in Saxa house, I 1 ? baths, well to well car 

1204 YATES’St p oint. Rent to purchase -possible pets, fireplace, finished fcgsemeni. 

3834)742 or 386-2ti? *<2* «* r month — Available Sept pool, playground, $350. 479-8430 

LUXURIOUS TREE LANE ES- 5955484^*°'' MS - 9 41 ^ OLDER 3 BEDROOM HOME, ES- 

totes. November 1st to April 30th. . .... -- < _ duimttsrea, wall to wall, newir 

Completely furnished one bedroom MILL BAY CLOSE TO HIGH- ! decoratdd, no pels; references re¬ 
el us den. two baths, ground floor *av - easy access to Victoria quired. 367*5030^^^^^^^^^ 
onto lawn, sauna, swirl pool, Duncan, vet «;iet area. Larg^ lot. 


_ _ MMAAlir a.a^j . l/A a B i C •■Wit, *BVf W , »Wlf I POUI. 

« L a E t swimmir> 0 pool, hobby room. M« 

aa!w. tur * o°n smoking married couple. 

Fort and CooA. Mature tenants ^ pgi, R#nt n#90 fi aW# . p,f tr . 

_ .. . ences. 388-5277. 


... close to Bay — Bright 3 
clean suite in small block. 


•37 Ellery St. _ 

and Qualitv'broedtoom 'ind'd'ra: onto. 81 

_ V..... 

IIMMGOmr P |,c * ‘ unde ’* P] u »*»„tY b«ir S T, The Features V. 7 i s«» 

,7 » coo« ST. mv.t.^bak«.y. .pprox no ^{« mjmo « «if^ Sl,rrn'^r v !CoSi! , “ . : te jpnSWSNA ou ' 

a-BBON RENTAIi *q. ft. V30.00. '* *% ■& JS* 1 - 

TO VIEW CALL The JASPERS' ; Entertainment Room. Spectacular 
8&2rlS24 


1035 NORTH PARK 

ia44 ®^ 1 ^5 0 ^ L larjfe sundpck. approx 

Now available for viewing the sec ... . , 

ond stage of this fine buildii 


Deluxe 1 Bedroom, extra 
’63 

vfi sq. ft with balcony 1266 sq I 


RENTAL OFFICE 
1545 Pandora Ave. 
595-3132 

Another Quality 
Development by 
Park Pacific 


ond stage of tMs tine building. We R q ” ' v * c 
nave Beene lor end One Bedroom ft $365 00 
■units available tor the senior w - 

renter. This adult building has a _ . . 

billiard room. TV lounga and Bv Appointment onlv 
games room tor your convenience., 

Suites have coloured eppliences, 
deluxe cerpets, tasteful walkover 
>ngs in kitchens and bathrooms. 

Cablevislon and heating allowance 
included in your rent. We have un- 
derground perking and two eieva 
tors. Close to WHIburns, consis 
tently one of Victoria's lowest 
priced supermarkets. To view 
tt-e-e s' ites call at our office te 
tr-een II and 2 p.m. Monday to 
Friday. After hours. Suite 408 or 
. all 3M 7324 tor pickup at your 
convenience. 


LJ 

WESTMONT 

REALTY 32 388 4434 

1226 JOHNSON 

Bright 1 and 2 bdrm. suites — 
Aa'king distance to city centra. 

Child welcome. 3S4-G13k. 

WOODHALL 


BAYWOOD ARMS 
BELMONT MANOR 
350-380 Belmont 
COL WOOD 

PETS & CHILDREN 
WELCOME 


views end country-like setting just. 
minutes from downtown. 

Town Houses 

Are eiso available from $305 Pfr 1 
month; 2 bedrooms from $418 per 
month. 


COME IN 



Fridge, stove, w-w carpets end Any dev end see tor ycuraatf. Our 
drapes ere included in rent. Bldg, charming hostesses will be oieased 
features controlled entrance, 1u snow cur fabulous complex, 
laundry facilities large balconies j 

and enclosed Play area. Close to 1 103-109 GORGE RD. 

schools. ,>ark end shopping. 

1 BR from $190 OPEN HOUSE DAILY 

2 BR from $240 MON.-THURS.-10 A.M.-9 

To view call FRI.—SAT.—SUN.—NOON TO 9 

Cathv 474-1051 389-5339 

Lauria 474-2915 (no appointment necessary) 

Concord 

DUPLEXES --:- 


Blackwood 

Manor 

2884 Blackwood at Hillside 


' block close to cathedral. $203. 
L Royal Tnjst^Comoany 


WATERFRONT 
■ suites available In adult 
pet building, neat_ and 


CRALTxFLOWER MOTEL 


modern 3 bedroom, plus full- 

ment partly finished. References 
required. $325. Phone 
days. 


SXS DUPLEX 

^ , $380.00 — Throe bedrooms and 

On Gorge waterway, offore deluxe bath up main floor — living room 
bachelor end 1 bedroom suites el — dining room. Two sundecks — 
special winter rates. All the com- kitchen, fridge, range artd drapes, 
forts of home. Completely fur- 1 Full basement. 385-3435. 

P R Brown and Sons Ltd. 


PLEASANT 1 BEDROOM COT- 
iage available Oct. 1st, View 
Royal area, non-smokers and no 
pete, 8225 per month. 47 8-8007. 

8280. KOUIMALT, AVAILABLE 
now or Oct. 1st. Small 2 bedroom 
full basement house, harbour view, 
large fenced lot. 384-5296. 


nished with meld service end taun , 
dromat on pram I see. Call 388-7881, |—. 
Concord. MC 


BRlARWOQO MANOR 
485 NIAGARA 


4 BEDROOM, W.W., APPLI- 
ences, rumpus room, 1 acre, 

Sookt. 842- 5649._ 

MODERN 5-BEDROOM, SIDE BY I iarqb « BEDROOM, hv BATHS* 
side Quiet cul-de-sac. Residential i ^ar langford ctose to 

Esquimau IVi bathrooms, wwll to i 1^7724 


Veona Fou?turttSrln Ibadroom suite, nnen and Tuesday. I stove end fridge available Imrrv 

room ano sauna, rowr i awailaKIs Plawator rnn. — -__ . —! rflatelw torn 47 $.2871 or 476 4080 


room ano sauna, rpur nir w ^ 1 -^. av m|| a hi* Elevator can _ 

^£ 402 ? If*no r am-' ,r ^Sl entrance,' 1 block Dallas. JAMES BAY MCDONALD PARK 
' Lto • , '«»t Parliament Buildings, $274 October 1st, large 3-badroom, «9w- 

I *••■•••" m month, 384 4529. cor at ad character side duplex, re- 


-; dletety. 5250. 

la 


31 


SSTSl I-wSEEr J51S5S2S s i‘; E o „ 

^ ;;!S Km Tw “ “ a ; 2 " 1room ' 1 bedroom, hteb.) gSr*^ eWW ^' 


corated cheracter side duplex, re- w *'l/ stove frictq 

■ . sponsible c©*fOle wanted Refer- ®* r * Q * H 74 Bey St. $375. 992-1806. 

for 6 ” 75 58B-40R._L BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE, V 

- •— -- - -^ bathrooms, *-* 


lelor. 

Available Immedleteiv please cell Rental 

resident manager 382-8803 parking, __ ; - - 

appliances, sauna, swirl pool 


ful view, heated Indoor 
bridge, crib, bingo. Maximum 


. living, kitchen, new stove * rt <*P* 552-3978 

fridge, near bus and school. 


»u» to MSI. toeMM : «K?, iy ffl5S22 is >SS; •»» naSr*S8S^!S: 

I, cable, carpeting draoes ; r * RHtrenctv Ph00# "**’ _! pie. no dogs. $250 . 478-3024 

ces, sauna, swirlpool, Cdr^' 383:3080. _ FSQUIMALT. UPPER TWO BED-1- 


878 BROCK 

2-B.R located In Langford $270 per 
month. Appliances. W-W carnet 
and drapes incl. For more Infor 
motion and apoolflTment to view 

call: 

JOHN SPEERS. 385-7581 

AND HERE ARE 
A FEW MORE 
TO CHOOSE FROM 


WINDSOR 


PEMBROKE 

PLACE 


2 BDRM. $265 

AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY 


_i ESQUIMALT, UPPER TWO BED-- 

BED- room, wall to wal, buitt in oven (MODERN 4 BEDROOM HOME 
cable, end range, basement sundeck, i Gorge area. 386-9536 or 384-8075 
water. Available Seotember 10th. pager 690. 

__ _ $350. 385-0978. 

VIEW ROYAL BACHELOR COT- 


8258 CLEAN, QUIET. 2 
rooms, upstairs, utilities, 
carport. 382-9449. 


-'HOUSE FOR RENT GLEN LAKE 


BACHELOR 

$198 902 Caledonia 


312-9760 


PIERS ISLAND 

7-bdrm house, acorn fireplace all 
aopi*ances, on peaceful waterfront 
lot. 388-4434. _ 

1000 sq.ft. 

2 BEDROOM 
SUITES 

FROM K40 


Per Month 

included — quality appli¬ 
ances, undergnHind parking 
and domestic hot yater. 

Offered by: 

CENTRAL MORTGAGE 
AND HOUSING CORP 

HATFIELD HOUSE 
877 ELLERY ST. 
CALL 388-3103 

WEST COAST COURT 
At Blanshard and Hillsido 
"cempttlelv furnished on request 
A few choice one-bedroom suites 
left in this centrally located com¬ 
plex. Meet suites face e beeutHulty 
landscaped courtyard, access cor 
ridors baffle all street noise so the 
convenience of a busy location is 
ompletely protected from any 
► ustle and bustle. Fully covered 
oarklng available with two seoa 
rale elevators from the parklna 
area to the east and west wings of 
this fine Dl Cestri designed build 
inq. Convenient banking end other 
commercial sa«*kPs available 
within the complex 
For special move-in privileges on 
these remaining suites end to view 
•lease cell Mrs. Henry at 388-4721 


THE 
CHARLES 
DICKENS 

NEW 

243 Gorge Rd. 
East 


1 BEDROOM 

i $230 1180 Fort 397-082? 

5209 925 Esq Rd Heat Inc. 3844736 
$200 980 Wordetov 382 5622 


/*/m a r\T a -\Tr ,J0 ^emb/»ok= si 385-9444 

COURT APTib* - v * sl 

252-254-258 Gorge Rd. E. 


BDRM. $220 

AVAILABLE SEPT. 1 


lane S16S include* ell utilities. LANGFORD, 2 BEDROOMS, SXS, ar t « uhone 477-7766 or 477-8552 
edulls. 479-8112. S®**?™" „^ CfiST“ nnr«r, to «> m 


adults. 4/v-ena. -fZTSi;* m| leblV 'September ,3511 HOI SEJ5 TO R» .M 

^.. .. . 12TH FLOOR ORCHARD HOUSE. $300. utilities not Included. 478-8877, 1 FI RMSHKIJ 

,»w. 8!ccV *039 Wvchburv, Quiet. 1 -bedroom, swimming pool, $285. or 308-7359. _ ( _ rtIk 

Street, Resident »^ 3 * 77 -_ 2 BEDROOM. $X0 MARRIED SAAALL COTTAGE ON 10 MAG 

Goodwyn Manage ment. 388-7923.- FURNISHED APARTMENT- couples, no children or pets. mm R vupvt U nr 

-— studio, Beacon Hilf Park. Pool and Water, drepee. carpets, stove. 1 ACRES IO MILES WEST OF 

L.. A:--U —._ISmMHMPVHH sauna, 5250 595-7804 fridge Included. B-1780 Haultain. 

one year lease. Situated very ciose country resort setting. A carefully (jmivfbsity BUS- ROUTE i|FA- : 479-3388. ni,« imu ^..iu, 

'£j&!£r?±u'3X »""*«** jBVBdi ftrSOXAL ciSls V "^lvS U $m*c^ to eii Tbcoroom upper^uplT^. 

S-"«rJrv tSjXW«l«S Ctotootoncto. PWtotto-MTT. - ;|,K^d »'« WIHIto. 

approx. $25. Rescoe Developments 

BRIGHT SPACIOUS APTS. I .. . Coro. *«■»«. 


costs, heat Included. 

, one-bedroom suites from $215. 


EX¬ 


HEAT INCLUDED 

CEPTIONAL • RECREA- m * nW '* 

TION FACILITIES 

For turther information please cell 

Including. brown bros. agencie' 

50’ indoor twimfing pool — 38S4771 

2 BEDROOM sauna* — Swirlpool —I 

$270 2822 Prior S834438 Squash COUTt — TeniUS 


MAIS 


OFFICE HOURS 
MON.-FRI. 9-5 
Kim Giles 
386-3124 

AFTER HOURS 
John Speers, 385-7561 
188-3464 Pager 6.16 


PARENTS 


I Court — Universal Gym. 

1 Bed. from -1215 

2 Bed. from —1275 
2 Bed. 2 full 
Baths - 5325 


Adults only — No pet* 
For Information or appoint- 


C.P.M. 

RENTALS 

THE BRISTOL 


ESQUIMALT, SELF CONTAINED 
bachelor suite, private home, bed - 
living room, hath, kitchenette, pri¬ 
vate entrance, close to bus and 
shopping, middle aged busmen 
lady onlY, single occupancy, eveii- 
able now, 812 0. 384-3 034. 

-WALK DOWNTOWN, 2313 
Dowler, at Queens. Bachelor, 5165. 

One bedroom, $190. 2 bedroom ; 

$270. Small quiet building. Guest 
room. Perking. Elevator. Resident 
caretaker. Rente, information, 

471-8 354. 

THE SENTINEL 

The desire to live in the Sentinel _ 

reaches from coast to coast, One bTANL>ARD FURNITURE 


19* APARTMENT ESQUIMALT ONE BEDROOM. 

FURNITURE TO RENT l!5L M** dr#c>ti ' * ,ov# 


j fridg e, 398-1892. , _ 

3 BEDROOM LOWER DUPLEX, 
hgat and water included. Children 
and pets welcomne. $250, 5954239. 


! 1 BEDROOM SIDE DUPLEX, 


_ careteking dutias to reli¬ 
able, mature tenants, regret no 
children, references. Reply to Vic¬ 
toria Press Box 35. 


EXECUTIVE tkOUSE FOR 
lease or rent. Indoor pool, fully 


ui ivuii utuuui iaaji, Tuny 

turrvsned. 4 bedrooms, housekeeper 
1 block to university, tennis club, 
“I course end beaches $1500 per 


FURNITURE and APPLIANCES •£**> Vt ^' | S E C L U D E D WATERFRONT 

DCmt S#ars - home, tr.ree bedrooms, two small 

KDiN I . •rn«ryyyi IUSFMFNT 5UITF (tans 25 minutes from city centre. 

COLO« or SLACK-WHITEIVS ! S-ffiE—HuJ22H*SW- J“ «K 


FURNITURE-APPLIANCES 
MICROWAVE OVEN 
at PENNIES per DAY 

1821 COOK 
385-2435 


lie 


HOUSE* TO RENT 
UNFURNISHED 


heating, dishwasher, etc. Large 
float. $550 per month plus utilities. 
652-2215. 


bedrooms available. 


$188 PER MONTH 

One bedroom eoartment suuite ln- 


383-5187 after a 


Why Not Live 


Are your children attending Mt. 
Douglas High. Fern wood or UVic 
Situated on the beautiful Gorge this fell? 
waterway on landscaped gardens 
Close to major snooping areas 
Bus stop to and from citv centre 

right at your door. Heat included. n 

Covered perking available ClOSe OY 

on. to 113^^258?* 

to. r«,«nt m.nmr tor • V*",™ 

special move in bonus. Please call p '?^ Tw0 lar ® # b*avgrounas tor 
368-6448 or call Brown Bros. Agen children, 
cies at 385-8771. 


1138 Yates si. 

SPECIAL DISCOUNT FOR 

PENSIONERS „ 

ment* please call ReaMaittI T^jM^’Y.ir/iSn^V 

Managers: , D Townsend at 383-3637. • wse ° woo,co 

Mrs. N.«ad 
38J-0509 

Mr*. Peppcrall *3r. 

Mm. Peppernll Sr. 

7,84-6103 

Mr. John Johnuton 


Three Ko,utv fixrni 
$40 f)er month 
Immediate Delivery 
.182-5111 


803 'Esquimalt Rd. 

CHILDREN WELCOME 
irqer 1 end 2-BR. suites. Close 1 
schools end stores. Call AAenagei 
Mr. K Gardiner at 38V9140. 


Watertront Apts. 

Aosolute peace and quiet a priori-, 
ty from $115, 3 only aveilabte 
R o s c o e Development Corp., 
642-5254. 


VOSUN 

I egrt st. 



. EXECUTIVE WATERFRONT 

home. Gordon Heed. Available tor 
1 year lease beginning Septemte' 
15 or October 1 Worth $700 but 
twill take 5500 per month for the 
i riaht couple. Non-smokers, no 
young children^ho pets. 477-»t07 

l-ansd<wne SLOPE 
t Couple required to lease furnished 
home for 6 months. OCT. t oi 
cupancy 5450. p.m. References re 
quired. Phene Audrey at SAEC 
388-6161 or 382-9255. 


MONTH TO MONTH 

PlOca or Grouo v , . Per . T .. nhnt ,„, 4-BEDROOM HOUS5 ON SHAA 

*1N FURNITURE RENTAL Y ? LEFTl New To..nhouses nigan Lake *»tertront, partly fur 


383-3655 Bav. 5150 


apartments 

HANTED 


nisned, v.asher. dryer beds Oc 
VIEW OF THE GORGE 1 Ddrms . ;n*«i i ' Jun '- >2S ° P * r m ° n,T1 
frplc., ■ |PPltgnces. large fenced 
yard. $J56. Avail. Sept. !. 


THE CHALET 


i I 5!' ,, n M . IW mu, riwni umvr iwvi, l.wi 

.595 2529. 7-BDRM SUITE 


ft 


PROFESSIONAL 

MANAGEMENT 

404 DUNDAS ST. 
PHONE 383-6078 


•lease call Mrs. Henry at 388-47 
or visit us on site dally 9 a.m. 5, Larjj# luxury onB-bPdmom 

——-——— j apts. w-w carpet, drape*., 

fridge and stove, in quiet; 
controlled building only 


1 Year Lease 
No Pets 

CAUL 477-5422 

tor further Information 

Gordon Head 
Townhouses 


Edgecombe 
Properties Ltd. 


> VIEW TOWERS B p T I ST » couple tnonl'DO any of the above inter to'resoonsibie part^. 

One bedroom and bachelor sultee smokers) wish to re««t furnished or ^ Y 0, |h | Y L WONrTuA l T 4 Phone Tl 2 ?4M456 or 

to. rent. Phone otficr hours 8:30-12 unfurnished eoartmenf tor 3-6 NO W — THEY WON T LAST. Pnone 112-743-9656 or 

i months bogtomne NouemBer — | 
rc w James Bev or Beacon Hlh area. 

i tk. iuuwu' Ba*cony, el- gWI fffi SUB?"*! 

All PriNJ^TAiMT F valor quiet building, Esquimalt. y 79, R-^jiSatkirk.jwennooa Mn 

OI I I AMN^,L, <79 -5205 or 386-2730._WANTED: OCTOBER 1. SMALL "‘HH ' 

Spacious 2BR° < Suito ,S One Child SPACIOUS TWO BFOROOM, couoie^smali doIT 

-ISSSt ’ •&»•"• fc^Kr^gS: -‘l&SS: 


COMPLETE PROPERTY 
AGEMENT 
(A Div. of O. F. Henley and 


>c.) 


MAN- VERY 

Parliament 
rooms: bachel 


REASONAtLC. BEMIHD *,SJ£S NS 12ri^S r VC ,tL l Si‘- E , 
ini. Ocean view. 1, 2 bed- 

I.W.W. « eord. MS^ASl, SSSSito.*KSKT aII 3&SS, V 


- References. Please call : 
SUSSEX. ESQUIMALT. 1 BED Kamloops. 573-3570. 
r ‘te, heated, child welcome, 


PETNTHOUSE <*>n, twite, heaieo, cmig w—come, nnirir accans, 

, Owner will give I or 2 yr. lease on! SM0.JB.24M._- 

CM rXIXZZ tull I > BEDROOM, VANITY RATH. iwkM I Mflroom or baraalor <■"***■ N,w - 

ir'-.r.tii *tr^r-,srsss., ,rtr " Kfc stk? ,,v " Rock - 

suite has all expensive wall to wall qu,tT corntr - M iaoa area -„ 


CARNAVON 
MANOR 
1243 Bay St. 


CONVENIENT 


5p#ctoue apts. which iticiuda w w. 

aroets fridge and Hove, sauna, 
swimming pool 


min. from city centre. Avail- Orangewood Manor 
able now. $185 and up. 4026 QUADRA ST. 

^ Attractive 2-BR. SuitCF 

' Phone or drop by and see IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 
jour resident managers. Only 


2 bed from 
I bod from 

Heat included In rant 


$m two unit* left. 

«» Office 386-3281 or 386-5232. 
e venings-weekenda. 


For information or appointments, 
call Mrs Briggs 383-4288. 


DUNCAN 

APARTMENTS 

3048 Cowichan • 
Lake Road 
748-0236 


1-BEDROOM 

SPECIAL 


INDOOR 
POOL 

Sauna - Workshop 

Rxiof Garden with Views 
Iw\UNDRY-EACH FUX)R 
MANAGER - 479-3223 
CONCORD 


Office. Mon.-Frl. 

388-4555 

MarArthur Park restates 

PRINCESS 
PEMBROKE 
APTS. 

& 1020 Pembroke St 

i By Athletic Park) 

New Building 
Children Welcome 
Close to Town, 

Schools and 
Shopping 

|W to W carpets, Drapes, 
tLarge balconies. Elesator. 

Controlled Entrance 
DISPLAY SUITE 

c XUWT tvtivw rT*wi»«MWTB. lure, coyerpo uarMng, neoi. nui, ^ 1 

1-Bedroom Suite* J195-S220 P ***• 3M-3W. Goodwyn W«t«f (laundry), Sorry, ! M2-4913. 

maat f -to^. ..t. % ...Ut «MU A 1/ Cwnt | i ■ — 1 


Q 4 DOWN 

nv° S ofl , 

V VLANSHAtDl 


MILL BAY WATERFRONT 
Fully furnishad J-bedroom cottage 
sorry no chi»- 
per month. 

J88-1I41._ 

WATERFRONT PORTAGF 
inlet, fuilv furnished 3 bedroon 
no-step character home. 6T 
montr>3. Non-smokers, references 
382-6378 t- 


I before » a.m. 


"People Helping Paoo e' 


BEDROOM PROSPECT LAKF 
home with private dock Available 
now to June 30. Rent $475 monthly 
478-1731 or 592 982? 


SHAWNIGAN LAKE. 3-BEDROOM 
$380.00-8405 00 229 Ontario St. — waterfront, 2 bathrooms, firep ace 

3-Bedroom townhouses across 3-car garage, wharf, October 1st to 
from school end playground. June 1st * “*- 


from scnooi end playground June 1st 5400 month. 598-6956. 


$350 00 11 117 Simcoo St. 2-Bed- 3-BEDROOMS. 2260 EAST SHAM 
rLJJ Ict den Large sundeck.. ntoan Lake Rd September to 
- -■ June. $«C0 mOMiliiy. /4a-j619. 


BROWN BROS. AGENCIES LTD. 


■■■■■■■_ _I------! JiMitfi (8hytim8>' 

master bdrm. huge with 3 pee. en- 0 ider home on Montrose. $200. Uti- 10-veer-old and cat, need 2-bed- . ^ mem xadnth . 

suite. Large living room, large titles included. 595-1925. room accommodation In Fairfield! fun basement bun- 

ItoStorTw. ' »ESPON*l*C6 WMKI NC M*n'|>'«- 

t call but ueTb *T rwAILFS regulres one or two bedroom apt., °**?* Tm ' . O 1 *^** 0 ^ 


1IOISKS WANTED 
TO RENT 



rr^TTflprjff^Ls.. »“~" 

SSBr-N,*Si..aS-i4S7 w *’' s>v ». ’ixszszr.aszs, 


" i fruit trees Privacy on extra large lAI r HlM Ml NT 
> , <>« , » .»tDiwoy .tu.TC IN i REAOY 7, ' 388-4434 

area 386-049l ' character home wonted bv reapon 3$4-9519 attar 6 p.m. Kt#UJ * *- T * -t-wa 


parking- No pats. 

ONE-BEDROOM 
ante October 1. 
area. 3864)693_ 

JAMBS BAY ONI 
cablt and beat. 
382 1939. 


Jl APARTMENTS to 
RENT FURNISHED 


355 Ellery St. In Esquimau. H w.n ESQUIMALT-CLOSE IN 77^^ - A 

to chock ttaae out right Largo (2 bdrm.) 4'^s rm. apt. SCH OOL TEACHER and 9:for RENT 
ih Mr. and AArs. Atkinson (ground floor), with main furnl- daughters r i9*f*f* 7 gf J badroom B # * C h, oceanf 
ad resident managers ture, covered parking, haat, •»*, rairftald. 386-1079 or pigugj, priced 


tibia Australian coupte. Perfect,- . . _ 

♦ennanta, fireplace and covered: RDAT ' URGENTLY NEEDED 

parking preferred. 384-4735 attar 6 DUA I 
and weekends. 


I wft—- K.-N rtnor JUUanUirMW I T 0 RENT hOWSeS, duplex town 
I h0u> * apartments and commerc el 

? f WE SPECIALIZE IN MANAGE 

! h MENf. call now tor professional 


2 OR 3-BED^OOM SUITE IN A|, 

2 * 1 °^ i frtdg«. stove, parking 304.4434 

daughter Non^sOc*- *•* I Our last townhouso unit $385 Ros 
or Nov. 1st. Phone 383-9173. , roe Development Coro. 642-5254. responsible A 


RESIDENT MANAGERS 
MR. AND MRS. J. BRANT 


"While They Lost" - . , 

INCLUDED in the Rent in Captain S Walk 
your .parking, water ami Apartments 


382-9454 

Anytime 

SORRY. NO PETS 


VILLAGE 
GREEN^PTS 


no pets. 1 quiet child O.K. Sept. 
522*. 

Dickie Agencies Ltd 382-4312 


at rtiiA, children require immediately, tur 

, M ,.,,.,i7r. l rF UM wished 2 or 3 bedroom house in 

-.- oeganfront cabiins.and oy- oak Bay Fairfield or Gordon 

pleats, *° Head area for approx'meieiv I 

I month. Furnished or unfurnished, months. rateranca* availed*, 


JOURNALIST, 2$. St^K5.QUIET J Phone collecl 521 2415. 


SELF-CONTAINED $175. 382-4301 1 cum, and 3 year o*d son. _naad_8 cnan2 


SMALL VP 
trailer suitable tor one person, 
near country home In A* ‘ 

. 15 miles trim Victoria. 


Mim\ur&ssszssi* oN.r^.Vh.^mT:' rt™ 

mi ^ ^ _ 

JoJ-ItIZ Jo4-|yjJ a»ter 6 MW sit Alt FT) TWO RESPONSIBLE YOUNG 

We have bachelor, one and two actm w 11 L~P*Ric' by THE i<vw«nwi n i<«..v. 479-16*7 Brian Brown 479-1667 working men looking tor N bed 

1 S2im2nt« «nd “towrv B AiYY).MM0DAT10NR room house with waterfront view 

Chateau Rockland Apts. { hou^ m ava1to%e n 7w%o^immed. |J* u J e V t ^mlnfc^ca l de^ m C aid^w- I J. H. Whittome 6 C 0 . Ltd. i !*«*9r9nces tor October 1st 


Ltd. 


ate occupancy. Manager's Suite, vice availl 
?l3-]22^Menjies. Caretaker's Suite Pff4 v 


1 view, no 


14-119 Croft. 


T«e bedroom^two^bathroom luxu- most imjxtrtant your heal C|os< t0 r>^ Yard and shopping 
ry apartment In modern building , \ .saving of $.'’,0.00 l>er centres, bus stoo at door elevator 

Ou.et surroundings, very suitable Itn wnt 1 1357 ESQUIMALT ROAD 

♦cr retired couple. Covered park- month fin your rent. and COf ,trollad entry. Roof deck 

mg. 539$ pgr " 

62-4218 wtekday 

s_899 CRAIGFLOWER 

1 .UM 101 . sMMiransr*ears U V,«.^, w.335X a.~f XftSSSi 13T 

TOD HACKKTT 5!!™!S-A«». «eSS91 ^ 


1 ACCOMMODATION, j 


TTirS 386-5246. 


month Phone nf*r r\| |D DCX1TQ panoramic vow. T and 2 

between 9 and Dt/N I L/Urv f\C.IN I j bdrm. sulfas available from 5195. 


1249 FORT ST. 

One badroom. ouitt adult block 

dost to town on bus. available - 

iwtembar Ut., $174 par month CONSTRUCTION LTD. 

ESQUIMALT-CLOSE IN . . 

Vv room, bright ground floor apt. 

... watgr, caW#,and 


Some with saav l ews Phone resi¬ 
dent manager at 385-9361 between 


THE 
SEAFORTH 


SANSAft APT. 

140 HILLSIDE : ca^le^ t ' w parklng , 'included. Near , ences. Call 595-6272. 


1:38 a.n 


! commence September. Furnishad ' 


1DRD MICHIGAN 


New 2-bedroom 

ns ,Aia l i a «,.s...»4^i3i 

. n rr rnmrvwiatlnn / 


LAUREL POINT i VERDON MANOR 

* J suites, some wltn S^Ssw^lmd'drver*' ,rWB *' ^ Hes 2 bedroom suites available — 
lor appliances, ta -1 K2J, |MALT RD I now. kids and oets O.K. 3824332. 

chute* 1W W.m Ma££jr 9 s SSyflftt Ikjm I***™; ----——-I ® V j 


parking, $197. Otokia Agencies Ltd. Two-bedroum suite $238.00, heel r choli IU *jrid-loth AAeneqars tultr No. 10. 3^-7 

919 Fori, 383- 28K) or 3 82-43J2._^dcaBMwIMR Tncluftod, av.n.bi. we e^ev s. MM 

BRAND NEW LARGE 2-B£D- '* to Parliament Buitdlnoa: $500-8800, J' A 1 /- ii/^u ICC 

room ground floor suite In new ; niT>0\T VII l^A Purchase option. 3m7si, 595^30 CRAlGHOUSE , 

2-tevol home. 5 minutes k> dowoDI POM VIU-A _ , _. 685 CRAIGFLOWER RD. fig*!: _» 

- - 2 bdrm tft. $250. Ibdr.lb. $1t1.»i SUITED FOR YOUNG PEOPLE,! 

Bacneior $175. Incl: Fridge, stove, ) bedroom basement suite, utlii- 


$235. 595-7593 


ESQUIMALT 

! brlqht 1-bo_ 

; monthly. Frldae, 

-1 —»—.gisir 


IYAL VICTORIAN MOTEL , 
and monthly rates, large 

_ ____ jome 1 end 2 bedrooms 

AREA. LARGE, from $180 pgr month and 855 per 
eulte. $199 week Pleeee cell 385-5771. 
re, heat - 1 - 


seme to share a 2-bedroom apart- 
! ment 592-0022. _ 


lease available. 


Bachelor suite - $170 75 heat end the BELGROVE 

* CCQMMO- inC "** ^ •SchSr 0 !' oSST'o bPIK' Av? S *" «iV6. mtonw mTj&S** 

— Ttmo ^ 1 ^ardwood fj 00 r % cable. Free Mch -> occ /Az ___! | . BE n n " ^ “ 


I FAIRFIELD BACHELOR SELF nM . 
contained suite. Close to town end gNE 
transportation. $175 par month ( ^ 


SHARE HOME 

Privets bedroom In fully, furnished 
home,’ quiet end peaceful setting, 
all Inclusiva. $145. 388-5039. 


ofl?ons A tor sanior N dti 28 n*ln beau- ’ bardwood f I port, cable. Free 

ri?ul new bachelor suites Centr^y for MQrm *t\on please L aund 7«3 ^ , ! Rb,# ,or ,adv 

loc ated. Phene 383-183 1 _contact Brown Bros. Agencies at 3*8-8371. ■ __ 

$259. "IMMEDIATELY. ? BEO 365-6771 ONE-BEDROOM. GROUND 

rooms, new suit*. In older home , . _ _ . . _ _ floor, lovely waterfront, suitable * n «rtm«ntc tram 1230 

r *"”' "“ ,r,a HAMPTON COURT J Sw** J^SSSS"*^. ”SW ~St3T.t ! ?®»r..' J w!- 

I ANGFORC^CpLWOOD AREA NAW lunwrl. 5 * clwrmlng I NvMI?*" 10 " ClAAA 

- - bedroom, near schools, heritage cultdinq overlooking Bea ' 

. ---- - - 


BEDROOM APARTMENT 
share With university student, 
... ..smoker, $100 plus Vb utllliTes. 
phone bill. 313-3259 


Fairfield, 


-ge__ 

family room, utility 
large tundeckk. garaje^ 


Si'S?* 


two coupl 


month. 112-653^237. 


lfa . QU»ET UNIVERSITY COUPLE 
need ?-bedroom home Up to $27T 

W«tCDm«, m<Wlthlw 4« r C#ot IS 


; monthly 
384-4374. 


) 


modern^wnhouse, fully furnished! ■ * BEDROOM ON PARKLIKE [ v ---- 

■ — - iA*,-M un, near Sears. Color TV. washer «r.d i hill, 30' living room with fireplace,. BUSINES;MAN REQUIRES s 

Bacneior $23o. 3633824._dryer utilities InCluded Weal lor fridge, stovt drwoes. Wilkinson bedrooms 2’ :•-31 bathrooms, pre 

ONE BEDROOM, ESQUIMALT, working man In kwenties,. non- Rgduced rental tor oc _wtth appliances, »Oek 

nui*t riMn a*n rAiitrfliipd biiild* srnokcr. pieasf si 10 rnontht/. ' cisloni( ptt edrt. prtftr okJff coo-' Bov or cordon Hud Contact 

inTcolSr T.v ! etr^L S. Aviilibie SwtgmMr 1. ReteF! Pie, no children. $&. 479-2710. 3W 1 4M2_betweenJ.$ p.m. _ 

cable Perking included. Near ences. Call 5954272._ B n*/‘n PROFE^IONAL COUPLE WITH 

Qu-et soacioug, plaasantly situated shoopmg, bus and rec yoUNG LADY TO SHARE 3 BED- 1 L^N I'rlb t>tALM trained outdoor dog seek two bed 

convenient to, bus and . shoppmo , Adults onto. No p f s. $270. M 4-8220. j ^ tisn ^ t h inciu- 2 bedroom cottage, fireplace, in i E?*. cottooe duplj* ,/ronj October 

SHAWNIGAN LAKE, SHAW- slve. 386-1869~betore 8:T 
Hionitii 3 * 54 K 54 ' : naire Resort. Winter monthly rites . attar f 


C narwill IWIIRVR, l' r EU'EW, «« I 

estate grounds, immedigtgly avail-! *» , ^*o i APf , ' , »*- 

able. Adult oriented. 30 min. from tween 1- 4 P.m. _ . 

Awntown. Roscog Omrelopments p| ANIJT REQUIRES OLDER 

6 42-52S4. _ city area. PrtfaraWy Jemes 

FOR RENT ON SALT SPRING, g** ^ F * lrt, * W " * 4 '- W15 

large 3^>edroom home, fireplace, 1 38W3t 


IS. 


h^e GE en , <toSfi > ?? 0 M MiU^Bav WANTED: COTTAGE FOR 
s II'* ,n, R r keason Shawnigan Lake oc 
wall to w*h Sundack, appiiencas ; i Mrlch Panmsuia.^ *52-1728._ 
and draoes. $365. Available imma-, MARRIED COUPLE want 
diataiv. *56-3*21. __house or cabin with vlaw, within 


LARGE S BEDROOM IN MILL-1 ]> ^4-2780. 

Stream area wall to wgll carpat- NON-SMOKING RE5PONSIBLF 


_ , - ■»Ti7 s«a — r^tifiPl CAhOSUN STUDENT. FEMALE 

385-5406 *_ VFRMAY MANOR ?^* r, h rn# ^! > F,lrfl 9 | ^ r ^* ,r lege^SlM tier month fnctodiri idl- _ _ 

— — vir - WF5T ** MANUK 5f.* c t h ' ln ^?f)25 0u *' 1200 imes. 592-4^5 or .139-3240, _17ng. Firapiace." Master bedroom px»la.''7equire 7 or”3"bedroom 

ON E -B ED ROOM, GROUND ^ , rd )JIJJKfn ST vlew Three H *^J — - CO-OP HOUSE WITH ROOM ' nneulte. Extra large lot. JJIS home or duolex. 478-0*20. 

tutor, tovetv waterfront, suitable 9 *JT' •!“ ISSrtments from $230 •J>* 9 ,"R W A <*ults, no pets. 383413). (N BEAU tif ul CADBOftO Bay, .w.iirw# r*m shared 385 3602 monthly. Period evelleble * z 

'•'!& izxxr .,:^r n J.d!? m .to^ **•”*- --- urns* 3453402 »»**- •**"*•■ 


•ropping end transportetlon. $221. con Hill Park. 
47M109 living room. *' 

STUDENTS -AVAILABLE NOW J n aJ£?°tT' 
bachelor Apartment end house- , ng units, 
keeping room in Falrtltld. 595-8845 - - 




W W drWM ttoa* end’ cable' ESQUIMALT I BEDROOM. *151, 2 cet.« v i.lpm ClouI to I 

Smill cnlldren welcom* Phone to bedroom. $18t. single room, $66. stores, *160 652-2732. 

iV.ew: 386-96S4 fieat^ wettr cable included, s £ LF - CO N T A, N E q7* 7 


HOUSE OR PART OF HOUSE TO 

- -^ 31 ^ 2(59 



TWO BEDR007A APARTMENT, 
.voodwgrds Woolco ereg. $250 per 
month. 38*0256. 


‘ESQUIMALT. LARGE. BRIGHT. I SRclufRf «J«J* 
ona-bedroom unit, saaviaws, *220. * ^ XiSl 0 J? 

j^lu-an. m-tm _ . i WWLJJ“ .“t 


__ I ft. to 1300' aq. ft. 2 bedroom, . 

ONE-BEDROOM SUITE, WALL-1 bathroom vacutlor, dishwasher, 
to-wal I, firaplgca. *175 monthly. | fridge and ‘ ‘ 

592-4021 - 


J relerence. r.qo.s,^. 3.7-3983 QOKE N3VV REST|NG RRFNT . 

PRIVATE BEACH v .n? Lp^torX ,m *fo^ ^ lcom *- 

. ‘ wal1 18 w8<l near woodward s 

c ar P otlng. _ 642-4241 - Lir()a ^cheior and l-badroom 

ONE BEDROOM suites In modern block, from $150 
Including heat end cabtovltion. 


MW Studants preferred. != ' "Z'™.’ -re^f bv ciuoie 

UNIVERSITY OR BUSINESS ' MARIGOLD . u .uMini-*lk 

Drvn*.c i g ,rl 10 * h,r# ntc# 0,d#r h0m# small 2 bdrm cottage, fridge and'*l-» HALLS. HAKt.HOl S).V 

4k . ;ancT bath, full cook inq and laundry! : ^JSSh^alf'A^v* TsAEC MOEK * and OlTlVf> 

BEAUTi- facilities. Waeklv tinan change. PERSON TO SHARE FRIENDLY : 5AtL XU RENT 

Old E>- cable TV. All found. $200 per mixed house. 383-4347 3* 1-61*1 Of 382-9255 ( 24 tlft. ).__ IV I 

■«” m "" h -.. i:m to KK.NT I£5E**.,ilit L -_i i TRAFALGAR SQUARE 


Condominium with prlvit# tnfry. 


; fridge end stove $350 1395. roi 
D evelopments Corp. *42-5254. 


nrnuii 

dwooC. 382-5*12. 


BED LARGE BRIGHT 2 BEDROOM 
t block, basement suite. Town end Country 
—_ er*«. $240 per month including ell 

>117.0* 1-BEDROOM. 877 O tij jl ' ff JUlrV WSS, 
qulmelt Rd. Adult* only. 382-5243 

or 384-5459. . l-BE_DROOM, GROUND 

11,5 

$180, 479-1194 after 4. -- |Q 


»i<H Beacon HIM >grk. heatedi aaml-turnlshed, older quiet Inv 

Jr sas. .ss», *’“■ 


? AND_ } BEDROOMS, 


snnsBhaBvia 


mature person, 384-9412. 


’ I BEDROOM BASEMENT SUITE, 

B FACON HILL ANb ~ HOS P7TMl I "I*#"*-™™ 
on* ttdroom suit*, cable, laundry 1 BACHELOR. *2^jj u -F A,RF,Et0 
$177 382-196* or 477-315* end Cook eras. 38*0*93. 


NEAR 

suit#. 


nw * ll4AJ . ft | rvja to' w ns |> aia T L. C L/A 1$ HILL. * PCUNUUfViO, * 

drapes, j TTr^T. — ! MICHELANGELO APTS. NEAR — HUPLENf ^ 1 11 KK 2 NT bathe, dlnlnj. 

JAMES RAY I^KijS^iSLuffl 5 PAIR FI ELD DUPLEX 1-BED shooolno - L ” at 

lafoUir" ** ~ \ v s wsiwr ms 


downtown. Stunt. F*l«FIELO Durtex. jtrUd lS?°H ***f° l 3fl. l «5«0 L wSn nSfi/linlwwn! ?<r"l..»w. C *n«!. 

jj I option to buy tor $72.500. 383-6071. , melton 385-1491. _ . 


Park, wall 1 


, hot water, cablavision. 
i welcome. Phone 

1 BEDROOM CONDOMINIUM 1 


382-0088. 


BACHELOR SUITE. FULLY W-1 tgJEf*V ,t0V *‘ 8250 ** 

tROOMI nlihad <1)5 oer month everything, ,0 *>9 f '• 


BEDROOM Ctto|RACTER 
eoertment. Fairfield, nTTr perk, 
beech, shopping and bus, SHO haat 
included. 5W-6392. 


HKES? e lJ ST 4 Ja A S 2 rto 

bedrooms, pooi. Tennis coons 

smell pet welcome Lampson St. 

- 


3-BEDROOM APT. NEAR COL- 
wood goH course drepee, carpet, 
•tove, refrigerator. Children wel¬ 
come. $295. 474-2090. 


417 QUEBEC ST., 

m* .* “ 


} ffl of tw Wfttf IWOI 

., adult*. No Data. 
$190. Sept. 15th. 


NEAR PARLIAMENT 
Ings, 1-badroom m 
email btocT Avallabi 
ly. $150. 656-5*72. 


JUBILEE AREA LARGE. 1-BED- 
room with dan. Available October 
1. 8248. 598-8346. 


2 BEDROOM APARTMENT, 945 
EaquTmelT >«d, 8W»17, aveiiebi# 
immedletelv. 385-2167. 


TWO APARTMENTS, both ONE- 
Badroom. One 8232, ether $21$. 
382-0506 


SMALL SUITE, FURNISHED, 
available now, hot water, haat, 
guiat, adult* only, S135 monthly, 
381 2889. 


Ptraon. Attar 1830 CARNARVON ST. SIDE BY 
tide, modern, 2 bedroom with 
basement, One child welcome, no 
pets. 1324 8 month, 477-3728. 

PLEX 


>toOM FURNISH 
... —ivie Apartments. * 


COZY COTTAGES WITH ^HRE- 


6AODERN, 2-BEDROOM L. _ 

separate laundry room. $300 Inclu- 
slve. AvaTtobto immediately. 
386-3731. 9-J. 384-9*02^#v*nlng»._ 

SIDE-BY-SIDE 3 - B E O R 013 M . 
new carpets, freshly painted, $300. 
208 Wilson. Phone before S p.m.. 


ROCKLAND ARMS H> 00 M wckiTH W. 1 v.ew 

1 bedrnom. ground floor, Oct. 1st, , dudes feat end hydro. 1388 Beg- -^ - - cottage 

10» Linden >ve | bit 595-3121. iBACHELOR SUITE, AVAILABLE 

L m m mSA^r ; now. Mature adults only. 385-3257. 


utilitia*. Adults. 4J94112. Farnwood area.. »1*. Avail 

.^vas «MK BW 


■174*3. 


te 

liable 


WALK TO WORK. 7 BFOROOM. t LUXURY ONE-BEDROOM SUITE. ”!?• T!^' . r E™”—. B E A C ON HILL BACHfV 

<m 3 * M0 ” mw ""' - 1 "*' SX^HTe. »2 Stt,. , ,ed * 00M »; 1 , llu. , "?«ff r m» , !!W.Sf s ' 


ESQUIMALT DUPLEX. ONE- 
bedroom aide, heat, water includ- 

LOff | Sd. $185, 4794832, _ 

ell DUPLEX. FaTrfTeLD 


UNFURNISHED HOUSE FOR 
rent. Available Seotember 15. 3 
bedrooms, 1 up, 2 down. Full base¬ 
ment. Large fenced yard. Near 
Mayfatr. 8310. 386-2397 __ 

3- BDRM HOME WITH FULLY 
*qepped Beauty Salon In base¬ 
ment. $*oo per month. Mr. 
Bracken, 388-4271 J. H. Whittome 
and Co. Ltd.» 


EXECUTIVE HOME FOR RENT. 
Ten Milt Point. 4 bedrooms, 2V 7 

» ith. Rent $550 per month. Igese. 

veltobto October 1. Reply Vlcto- 
rto Preii Box I. _ 

TO LEASE OFF BURNSIDE. 
2 -bedroom homo, large kitchen 


CENTRAL SAANICH 
Mini Warehouse end office spec# 
tor lease Aveilabte immediately. 
Cell i-- 


*11 *52-3908 betw e en *-s p,m. 

GOOD PARKIN^” “ 


Retail store, offices or warehouse 
$1200 per month or Vk for 8400 
0-3932 Douglas Street. 


BURNSIDE AREA — 600 - 2700 
eq. ft. Suitable wholesale, retail, 
gjsptoy office or workroom 

♦00 SQUARE T 

space, new, Ei 
*56-7608 *56-7181 

RETAIL OR OFFICE. GROUND 

wfth' stov# endlrldger'tireolece. ,3^1*4/® ™ ^ Bnd0f * 

full basement. No pets. AveUebto ^ - -— 

Oct. lit. $350. 38309*8 7-9 p.m. ! STORAGF SPACE *OR RENT 
^oroe Shopping Centre. Phone 


AVAtLABLF NOW, 
" •eetoedroom, dlnlr 


room. $210. 38*-e71L 


' v .je‘v^P 


_.ment tastefully redecoereted, 3.000 SQ FT. OR PORTION 

BED-1adults, families, references pleas* Keating Cross R* indoo*- snori or 
1 *350 5*1 Head St 386-0394 ! long term. Reasonable 388-4423 — 




r 


































































































































































































































j|2 DAILY COLONIST . Vk'turlB. B.C., Stilunia>. 19TI 

*li HALL*. H AREHOl SES | *15 HALIuS. XS ARKHOl *TA -‘34 MORTC. Al.LS 

STORES AND OFFICXh STORES AND OFFICE? FOR SALT 

TO RENT TO RENT 


Bl SI NESS 
OPPORTUNITIES 


244 RE VENT E PROPERTY 2*4 REAENTE PROPERTY 241 



(trbrtr fcteelf 
firaltu Ctfi. 


GROCERY FOR SALE SEAVIEW 

"SSTL-« FOR YOU 

n corner tof with off- U c 

&^'$220 PCRMO. 


KHJBruCI 

.7* COOK *tT" - 6 S? ,ET ? ?iru.snr 


WE SPECIALIZE 
IN LEASING 

EXCELLENT TIME 
TO LEASE 
GOOD SPACE 

WE ARE AGENTS FOR A VARI¬ 
ETY OF OFFICE. WAREHOUSE 
AND RETAIL LOCATION!. FOR 
ANSWERS TO YOUR. LEASING 
QUESTIONS. CALL US. 


YOUR FLACS MANAGEMENT 

No* Available — Medical ©f- 
♦ica across from Rovai Jubilee, 
itlon ( 


_ twSff'aactT representing >0 


of our ground floor 


lar offers to _ 

leaseback if you quality. 

I * L JOHN AOOICOTT 
i 3W-vjSt i 

REA £** AW FROFeRTtES LTO, I 

GROCERY STORE 
LIVING QUARTERS 

Excelled* family business with 
turnovar of war 12K.OOO. oar 
annum. Horn* and ttort it on « 
laraa corner lot 110x104. Full £iice 


DUPLEX 

$59,900 

Attractlva. brief* and wen-kept' 
2 bedroom, plus toft ba*e-"#rt 
main floor aulfa. Full self-con¬ 
tained, *et>arito antronca. 1 bad 
room up Cloaa to town and bus. 
* 'out*. Owner to raatucoo exterior 

__ . r's 2 » iLrlU^ln^nd^t^ 


UOMMLRCIAI. OR 
PROPERTIES 
IMH NTRIAL 


2 mi HOISEVJDR SAIJE Urt HOI SEA MIR SALE 




«vvz sr« ctm. 

Goo^perklng^on*twa*r^aSSStt iS"" W “ ^ 


1007 FORT ST - Frlma main 1 

»«^"2S»s5 & 

of cornar on atraat exposure. Drive 
by than call for details. 


J»KJ »IQSi. 

par moot* teas* (includaa haaf, P'#*'* call 
hydro, taxes.) HAWKES at L 

Location — 1939 Laa Avanua 990 Blenahard Si 
nouri, 477*9544). 

2. Frlma ground-floor madicai* - 

commercial space up to 1.000 
sq. ft. In twa attractlva, new 
building — elr-condltionlng, 
covered oarktnr 

Laaaa includaa neei ana nyero. atnfVMi 

S8 00 per sq. ft. 540 BUSINESS 

tlon — “■ 


wt:-o«8Kft 

ssSh Hawkes Ltd.. 


lof,‘ reasonable taxes. 
Oftafa on *44,900 — Giva u» a 

call. .... 

Marllvn Moora 

CaEitXlcWv REALTY L^D- 

Esquimalt Duplex 

$70,000 


730 R&«£ 3rd Diaca M aff 
Oawaiaa. (40x100 iTyritn a 
laraa. solid o»d horn*. Aporox. 
1*00 aq. n. on tn# main alua 
2nd floor ,_pw* SdkjMlfMM. 
Posstoi# uaa a* a shop and at- 
flea for a bakaag, SjitTijap. 

tm&re-JMgQ 

f n * A »n »%'and Son. W-Wl 


GARDNER 

REALTY Ltd 


•as Fart SI. 3B5 

(NNt. WtVlCIi 



& 

WHITTOMTS 


THE 

-HISTORY 

MAKERS" 


GROCERY STORE 


FUUKPLEX 
(BUILT THAT WAY! 
S89.000.00 

TRADES POSSIBLE 
CALL: 

JOHN ADDICOTT 
J*W454 477*82311 


For Sale or Lease 


OPEN TO VIEW 
1559 WESTAUL 


Frl.-Sat. 1:10-4:00 


-’inu two be dr earn up and down mw*** ,- q f V 

m .. n mrouoM,™ Tm m REALSPAN PROPERTILS 

mjSn! 7,fl00 gtd ffStHt | “ * 


WANT 


l TED. $3*000 1ST MORT 
i gaga. »74 504 proparty. Call ROB 
“ ANGUS *42-2574. National Trust 


cal,ant flxturas and aqu'pmant 
- nTcaly laid out tar cuatomar* con -1 "•*< 


bottom and an|or 


LTD. 


Locatlo 


1022 


I 595-2121. 

ZU) 


ORT- nlcaiy laid out tar cuatomar* con-, B.^m^ nat ucJ can deprl 
ROB vaniancts Arnpia parking at front ^ t^hdlrMbv 

•ruat. Full prlca $22,000. Fhon* Victor »«• L uil ft $ 

uu.nrv» ■ttl.MSl or 479^54*. Byron IJT c#ot .?* r .^?A r 10 wf T * 


Wonq 345-245* or 479-4549. 
Prlca and Asiociataa Ltd. 


OPPORTUNITIES 


Ivrnn l l ^ r a^*ii twmi 

,vron tha Incoma. ML 34092. 
H - I LOANS DOYLE 
CANADA TRf “ 


HOME PLUS 
IN-LAW SUITE 


CEDAR NlLL MALL — Llmltad 
number of araat avai'abla in thia 1 
now mall — 

outli 

- _ _ _ 

SUPPLIES would complata ’this 
heavy traffic location. 


dent* Naw of*lca »oca»- 
__ ... axacutlva-daalgnad. a»r- 
conditioned building with laror 
act»rlor sign — Attractive re¬ 
caption area, secretarial and'Shoppng 
ofctocwln, Mil-, , *|>c „ M 


Victoria 
Delicatessen 

Centrt wocftttoo 
rlce<1 $U 500 _ -_ 

WTL pS'JTaSiSBi K.WeL>»«• 'VgS’A.HTS V« wrSgrS '“COUPUE 'NEEDED 

Xr-TRAV^L . AGENT-STEREO 1 ...._ ' J* 1 WMi*. mw for this ca^h andcarry _ Mixer, 1 tS,/ 9 * - — - 


SSS $59,000 

1 Only 2 yra. o^5 and 1040 so ft. an 

itt-.- -/ - r».j. i — 


OPEN HOUSE 
FANTASTIC 

, ____ CONDITION . 

M M thbwroom t Enchanting, small. 2 bdrm (plus 7 h bik to HILLSIDE Shopo n 

V CaS ' <Hwn) home situated hlon on a Mall. EXCEPTIONAL J-BR ho'" 

P far retail sawinT^of- '* r 9* baautMully itnascaoad tot. with private Yard- MATURE lark. 

r L ;‘?JZ «wp . .. . 

S3 «RSTkoSsrVSS».^St 1 »M27r*ROSS WUCKEN 477-0029 

- mrlfatttr a,TLE hRB} ™* OPEN SAT. 2 - 4 

liqmt fJS5ft*i«. 2536 FERNWOOD 

easL. anxious owner us* ^ bjyjp to 

prooartv. situated in new Keating i o CAADTV WAI ICP - Living rm. has fireplace/ 2 alv^ 

nojstriai area — '•’* acre lots and Os b/Wr • T rTL/LOb badrms. Huge WtcW full gam 

^arger Prl<»d from « 75 oer sq. ^, 1 , opportunity! Aoaoiutrv ~ 

ftl and up. For further Information 1 iJJoilaa* 3 bdrm. full b*mt home' 3M-4271 RUTH 


LUKAfTIS 477-530* 


WSSTr. , CENTRAL SAANKH 

area.'” Good turnover. Profit and i ^ ^im’ SANSON! inc'udh 

loss statements available. For in-i3 bdrm sideXsida duplex near w#itg| 

♦ormet'.on write Vlclorla Prass, s * x 9 p t. and Flam ng Parks. Each ^ 

Box *31. 1 side rents for 1395. Building only a ^LLT_ 


12 


badrm.. 


VANCOUVER ISLAND • Canada trust 

irawfiraas Esqu J?i Q J t ^ plex ___ 

- Mrm $ 25ooo iSL-aSr«4E ,, itt sss: 

lrvi3 bdrm sidaXtlda duplex near w#staatt qjty. 3U-9941, or Cal^l 


r* ■-v- 43.75 per M. equals opportunity! Apaoluteiv T 

. ^ t urm#f "l form,,,cn spot leas 3 bdrm, full b*mt home 344 -a27i 

.ii-.OaO^tDam mSOn) '; "tundILk’T.u. L «Sr.^ < DR 2 YEARS NEW 

INDUSTRIAL S&TC hSS! ; ;? ^ 

VANA HOLMES 


456-3443 (Ran Tldman). 


3*5-7721 


NARY . _ 

INSIDE YOU'LL 
LARGE FAMILY | 


5910 


,_ or 2 

wish to oaf - PI 

— in meats, cold cuts. 


9SMS %£&&&&*& 0 S®flMT- 


and ouaii! 


j.ia 8 K* 


PRICE 
REDUCTION 


•-55*1 GAIL JENKINS 47S-44JP 
BLOCK BROS. REALTY LTO^ 


:aa* hoi'sf s i 'or sale 


CHARACTER 
$53,500 



WESTCOAST 
professional 
their excel—., . 

,w ~ 10 " *•**“• I saw s tnT6idk.r *rt, iiT* 

2 ir^ s m „ C 

A. »* .. «3.00 W H. «. i,. “ *„To ra» I3S.SJ 

•oo sq. ft. of errict r»n i»; 

HSi jjl'iSriTiHf'8,17Jlf WI moaouardi A»o»(»Tie» 

month. 311-4164 


Great 

portumty 

lOTEU PLUS 


RISI 


JUBILEE HOSPITAL - l 
ioeca. 750 so ft. finished^ m—*.* 
with large recaption office, two ex¬ 
amining rooms, lab. (frivete office 
All this within 200 yards of the 


JOHN ADDLOOTT 

Presents: 

FDR LEASING 

i OFFICE — AIR - 3100 ft. 

1 WAREHOUSE — Ml — GAS 

KRT.TftVwAAtHousc, - **518888i = d26&2* 

srsrru gsia r-»£_« 

OFFICE SPACE In • larqe Fod CALL: 

St. redeveloped Heritage Bulldino. mirv' * rvMmmr 

Cait for Details. JOHN ADDICOTT 


TV ACHES - ONLY 275.004 
Situated in a prime tour Is! traffic 

jjgau^ag.aiat 

»auna house and large above 
grade sw'mmlng pool, coin operat¬ 
ed laundry, great opportunity far 
further aioSsnston. Showing an ex¬ 
cellent return. Phone to^apoolnt- 
mant to vtow. Inventory Ihd fin 
c ef statement Is available to a 
serloueiv interested party. Piai 

l^ 1 ! 1 Ctffl Anderson *77-3994 

Sooke 

Commercial 




TWO SHOPS. HARBOUR 
Square, downtown. 1 block — 
impress, aoo square feat. 

washroom facflltlaa; Oak Bay Vll- 
lege, choice location, 270 square 
feet Both low overhead, also 
without lag-—*— 



\*\ 

jJn^lOWN 

■SA. 


"Peeeie Hptoing Paapta" 

SAVE TAXES 

WITH A QUALIFYING 

APT. BLOCK 

AS LOW AS 


ING OF 3 RENTALS. LOCAT- 
_ ON ROCK BAY AVE. WITH 
12 ZONING. GOOD OPPORTUNI- 
TO LIVE IN ONE SUITE AND 
- TO DEFRAY 

*,E BILL PAL- 
WKm 5*9-4210 island 
Ltd. 


y| f « CDirs'phO'l? i 
FREY 3*4-7545 or S94H 


m 


•OWN 
•OS p* 

LANShaBO 


sub 


^PARKING 


"Peonla Haloing Peoo»a 


Boa 

)wcVim-b».«w.| SOUTH OAK BAY 




COMMERCIAL OR 
IKDUTMJU. 

FROFERTIES 


! 32 Suites-5650,000 


■ ,r,aa --— j Geoff Singleton 

* M *™R!IA L S! : £si. c '* L ' STi 


BCSINEIR) OPPOR¬ 
TUNITIES 'WANTED 


WANTED MOTEL 
20 - 30 ROOMS 

IRtSfiLZr&fXtt ^ ‘JOW maintenance 

EnglTiY Vu^^JMjOOOjLgOm ASKING $223,000 


12 SUITE APT. BLK. 

PRIME LOCATION. 


OFFIC 


_jaBiinad 

taoilshad centres, all quality build¬ 
ings, ail on-eMe parking. 

Call 388-6454 




EAISPAN *RO*e«TI*$ 


UK2I35 suites 



pnorerms iro/ realtor 


TWO WAREHOUSE UNITJ, . 
tent in warehouse complex. Build¬ 
ing a years old. One 
square feet oock level 

-IMoh celling. OH heal._ 

I quired. Ample parking, rant 
par month. Second rental, 
prorlmateiv 5000 square feet, 

; hqated. with lower celling, but 
I w.tn very specious offices. Nicely 
1 laW out. Good for distributor of, 
, small artlclea. and could be com- 
| cinad sales warehouse. 1*3-9437. 

NEW OFFICE 


WIT -$95,500 , BU VAR 

4774232 1 Concrete block structure •'ic'vWas 3*2-9191 BUS. Rl 

[TIES LTD. ' a large open area of aborox. 4.000 

mrr.r™, ft WWia/JMS* KJ- 

rsbfss. •stare «... .^ gg^v^ spaoous suttes 

loading. IS* J loading, extra perking, endjvtyre Area. .Apply 


- MMi . inanclal<Green Adas'RgfcHv UkL/ffijM 

$1000 statement available to mtarastad Broadway. Vancouver. VSP IP* 
SP- party Bulid'ng would previse for Call 17345*4. 

t, oil a multiplicity of uses. Exclus-ve.- 

For ' ‘ 


1 24 suiter almost Identical. Next 
door. Both have Vge paved parx- 

QuLlTY CONSTRUCTION '.7J? * M c ~“ rb * 


OAK BAY 


HOME. BUT 

KITCHEN* A FORMAL OfNING 
ROOM WITH F P., 3 BATHROOM^ 
Sit SO. FT. REC. ROOM WITH 
BEAMED CEILINGS. CLOSE TO 
UNIVERSITY, EASY CARE 
_ YARD. M.L.S. 3502*. ASKING 
Oal.ghttul 2 -badroom Tudor styiao s*3 900. TO VIE N PU6ASE CALL 
home with coty charm that will BOB JOHNSON 
delignt any coupl# that are loox nq It*-4271 t92-35,3 

lor something out of the or diner y 

The Best of Gdn. Hd 

space fv workahop. Immaculate caH Donna V., 3M-«27i 

i'ower ahd vegetable gardens with ^ |. views: 3 plus udrms 4 e»e 
fully tenetd rear yard: This t»ma ; solit. high location, ? sundeexs 3 
has iust bean reduced aver 13,000 baths, 2 fireplaces $111,000 
as vendors nave purchased. Call, 

today tor appointment to view. • j. Near completion. Cornar <>■ 

You'll b« glad you d'd. (MLS). near uvic and all schoo s a 

DIANE ^LILAAEP odrme., finished rc rm. — 2 ‘ 

3IS-7721 J*4-*075 pgr. *C7 pieces, high view with sea 

glimpses, Cathedral ceiling and 
Bay window In Living room — 

LANGFORD «*«° _ 

SUPER BUY _• 

wi> * — m#mcurw j uorm. 

full i Make your appointment today ‘o entrance home. Developed oesr 

____ r _har,' view this beautiful 3 year new fun i mant, carport plus perking. M-L.s 

dryer, stove and frfdge. S40.000. basement noma on quiet street. $99,900 Donna Vallkoski, 3**-427i 
Exclusive wjth; ^ .Mam tloor features LR with stone , 3*4-2057. 

^-C€CP*ARCE KP Qg, modern kitchen. 4 pea 

3M4K* or 3*54771 anytime bathroom, 2 bedrooms. Partially a^A RIIiRMSIDF 

'devtlocad basement has large r*c **3** DL/rv IN^I L/L. 
cni 1TH OAK RAY '’OO' 11 with bar plus laundry fadli-1 It's not a oeiece! It Is a so d 

JfUU I n ar\ I , t . #s Yard ^ W«II land home with 3 spacious bdrm*. E> 

fQZ 7 nn scaped and feature* huge a undeck snapad living dining room Gatiev 

^YO,/UU 0 ff xitcnen. Priced for immadiafa kltcnan — l'a baths. Decorate In 

T ..An, sale at SSJ.900. MlS. side as you wi5fl, tna price s 

Lharming i uaor oale briggs worth ttw e«ort. $ 29,900 

Located near T>g Marina and The 3*5-7721 *92-397* 3**-4771 Donna Vef'kosxl 3*4-205’ 

4$>AP'T\n.'VT«: GaK Bay Beach Hottl. on a wide _ 

.Al'AK 1 1 a , A ,^ en completed, this new OAK I AMOs APFA 

15 suiter In mint condition with a home win truly surprise those who' MODTW OAK RAY L//Af\ L.J^iNL>ro 

good suite mix- Situated on wide know o&od des'gn and floor plan INv^rv I n DO I Starter or retirement, 2-bdrm. 

Careful consideration has been walking distance fa UVk. This 3 st 9*> bungaiow on large easy-ca'# 

R ven to a family homa we would BR, 4-levaf split executive homa is tot close to ihooping and transoc' 

> proud to call our own. Exc of masonry construction Which is.tatkm Askmq $43400 MLS. Fo^ 
JIM McNAOGHT 59242*5 vary rare In victoria. It Is situated ■ i information please cal.. 

on a 70 x 152 oak tread lot and TadWlHilnion 452-273* 

ail screened for privacy. Among ; 3*»-427l Oliver Doug as $?*-393» 
irs M features 2 ^replaces, oak 


Just listed. An immaculate : 
badrm. homa on a toveiv garden 

' * -- —-five 


jot-m 

sap. | 


WESTMONT 

REALTY *W 388-4434 


it m. Mwnii w w fwvwif 

Tnru-najipian, attrec 
m. wttn nraataca, oak fK 
>. Din. rm., bright kitchen, run vaxt 

"7MW Wff 

^atvawHtti: Main 


full information, caM: 

C Iff Anderson 4n-3W* 
Desmond Hotmaa 47»-i227 

Peninsula 
Bakery 


Area- App<v. In. “^^^aS ASKING IWO.OOO 

“ r SYL SHL'MKA 

-1477-0191 596-1337 

244 REVENUE PROPERTY 


125 suiter. Full 10N C.CA. with 
good financing. Nearly xero vac¬ 
ancy factor. Could be syndicated. 


ESTATE SALE 


1911 QUAOK* 


RETAIL 


3400 DODO LAS 1750 sq. tt. 
fi05 QUADRA 3400 sq. H. 

OFFICE 

DOWNTOWN 340S 

QUADRA CENTRE, 10*10 *q. ft. 

WAREHOUSE 

»fflaMW s wrr«r ff ‘ 


SPACE FOR LEASE to m ^ 

BOARD OF TRADE of tna^iaanasf and finest run (am- j 
BUILDING (ADDITION) j fiXS** ArtSTa I 

Bastion Square. Victoria good return and po»Jh«* 

For Information Cbntact 'Z'ZZX fa.nS| 

38^8111 stotemants. equipment, etc., olease 

ofTSCE. rental. c *"' 

-lERTON HOLMES 3B44U4 


8WINERTON8 

m 

REALTY WORLD* 

FAIRFIELD 


Royal Trust 
ROYAL TRUST 


$39,000 ESQUIMALT 

Opposite Juo.iae HotPitst. G^eai LISTED AT *109,000. For pnveta ? 9" proper ty ore 44 m . 

«?."»?wixsrs: , r^ rbsh- "Kl .. 

$7 suiter with good com mere I si an key, please call Excl. Salesman: . JT* 'nformeripn end to via* 

I- - ** *a» 


•inanclng. Owner will 

iaad lease on commercial. 


5-1771 (anytime) 


FAIRFIELD 

I JT aultar a.R.p. with fun to% QUAMIs^HAN ST. tnvasf^tJljfff^iy'su'Rg^S ^ 3 Elt , r , R() 3 u ecrea o» 

;c-iL A ^M'S.%, m * l '’ w L(Near Foul Boy Rd.) 

- - -it I« .... ^ d#v»loped. Priced at 

1 . MLS 353k 


ForecL 

remalnl 


1 Cloaa downtown location 
i 13 suitor, full 10N C.C.A., built 
I condominium. Prim# rental area. 


Ill 


WAREHOUSE 


PEMBE 


Ideal city location in brand new 
structure. Buy for the cost you 
would normally pay in rant. From 
1000 to 29400 sq. ft. available next 
spring. Act now. firm prices avail-; 


STADACONA 


CENTRE 

fj*.*!?. mss? 


P-lma 

High traffic’ _ 
from 450 sq. ft. 


OFFICE SPACE 
GOOD LOCATION 


f 


asass j asinME. tart ssm*?. 

the door. Carpeted throughout 
Rates negotiable. Available tor 
rant or laase Call Mr. Martin 
3*4-4271. 

J. H wnttome A Ca., Ltd. 


M-W CENTRE 

2414 BRIDGE ST. 
OFFICES — from $225 mo 
WAREHOUSE - from $95 mo. 
SHOAROOM — RETAIL - I 
$175 mo. 

Available month.y or on leas*. 
Answering Service, racapttonlat, 
boardroom, parking ail available. 

R. D. LAW 316-3124 


RETAIL SPACE 
* 0 hBn. 


tram Apptox meteiv 3 400 souere feat v 
near raw warehouse at *34 Devon 
shire Rd. Heated, 2 washrooms, 3 
targe overhead doors, deck load¬ 
ing, wifi accomodate 45' trailers. 
28' calling, fenced In for security, 
plenty of parking. Availably at 30 1 
days notice For more Information 
please call 477-4421. 


—High - 

-Moderate Rates 

Modules from 1* 
service 


c "‘ c,: J \S°V& LL 

Saaspra^Proyrt las Ltd. 


TX 


YOU CAN BE 
4-part OF 



IV2 ACRES 
RESTHOME 
GUESTHOME 
ZONING 

WITH LARGE 
IMMACULATE 
MANSION IN COI NTKY 
SETTING A FEW 
MINUTES FROM 
CITY, CLOSE TO 
ALL SERVICES. 
CHARMING HOME OR 


ESQUIMALT 
APARTMENT 

vnwaKP 

closure sale: oniv a fax 

irnafR building, 0f1 w9th W fullT | walking distance to’downtowr. 

• oL £ 4 %tor equipped, ?4 suhar In A-1 shape. Also walk 
dated with naw dre- no distance to downtown. 

_now carpeting In ma¬ 
jority of Mites. Wan-managed and *4 suiter. Ne vacancy factor and ; 


A 11 r> c 11 v a 2 badrm nom*. large kitchen Baawtor ... . _ 

Th.rough-heH entrance featuring a ment. Plus extra 'Inishad room — 02 


moat lovely L-rm end D-rm. laundry room. wo’’kshop. Large,SM-iiri ^edWiTkinson 4S2-7 7 39 

Brtgnt kitchen wHn eating area, paved parking. Quiet street close 3 SS-J? 7 i Oliver Dougiet S9i 392* 

Full bagamant wltn finished rm. to schools, etc. Good income., * 

immaculate condition throughout. $75^00. 

Offered at S43.900. 3B3-7721 BRIAN COUTTS 59* 2i05 


J. H WHiTTOME 4 CO. LTD 


1Q60 SOUTHGATE I «S?Sms. feidlng financ ai together, ^daal Investment. Most UNI^^^^TY CORDOVA BAY 

.tetamant, please call: „ _ ! suites have citv and harbour UlNlVttOMY RAMfHFR 

FF ANDERSON _ VUP* vews. Largo 10N mortgages. Sngnt. wail maintained 4 bedrm., r\/YIN v. n CK 

, mssK£?^ss- Isss, 31, ““’••“iis we- ass. ^ 

M r Jkfe and OiRWUrk <v6f f 0 ^ . ftat • tiJ *> HA/fr/UNn ll N Kafhrn 


BR. owner's eulte. cozv basement. 


suite and 7 tully-furr^shad H.K. 1 rAX SHELTER 
rooms. Excellent condition Inside . * rw»/-»r»t'ca T /WAT I »i' 

end out. Exclusive FOR PROFESSIONAL »or 

245-24*1 ED JUPP'^^^M 


ar*e and sundeck off. Cose to 


■inq area iu: 
unL' Beaut'hj 


2 bedroom Hk be tor OO' 


! 92 unit fownnousa complex Good reryity and Khoois. Destonad tor home on quiet stree* with some 
I -entai. Area with tow vacancy (ac- family. Baw care lot with some sea views Feature. LR w«to fp 


j fruit 'traaa. Offered at Sa*'.»o'. 


JAMES BAY 
114 ONTARIO ST. 

Five suites, fully furnished, in ex¬ 
cellent repe'r. snowing a good re 
turn — tow vacancy rata. MLS 

mjr*° eojoM 


family room with FP. Large DR 
with built-in baroeque love'y yard 
90x100) with aviary looking tor 
o>ds. has oart basement wth 
(inished hobby area Reou:ad to 
$*2,900. Open to offers. MLS 3445) 
Attractlva 2 bedroom on Guam - 345-7721 DALE BRIGGS 592-397* 



OAK BAY 
BORDER 


PEOPLE 

\A'* have a selection of Class xeen. Needs soma painting end 
31 and 12 buildings tor sale’ new carpeting. Owner will consid 
tx, vying’ON C.C.A. flanging tr trades. 

La^us discus* 11 vour ^obie’ms 1 95 aultar Prime Fairf.ajd tocation, chan ngir FgiTttv Rd." Thr'oligh 
and our proposals wlfh you Large 10 ! V4 1st mortgeoe and hail entrance, lovely L-rm.. D- 
and your ac^untants. jAiLK! swnar-will consider cerryina 2nd rm.. brigrt kitchen with eatinql 
years 594 - 3321 . *o covenant. sree. Fall 

OAK ttY^ kISlIV LTO 

S/S DUPLEX 
REDUCED $3,000 


APAAOXIMATELY 1.300 SO. AT. 

ol cnotco, Oftttit OHIO, mo* .1 -- 

%n nues. isnss ®^„ D n ^?i EST 

par sq. ft. Lease available. (Could AVAILABLE FOR 
be laaaad separately aa two 1250 


fOR LEASE. _ MP 

fasstonalI or orrlco space in naw 
air conditioned building In Cen¬ 
tral . Saanich. Rapidly expanding 
M needs stores' 

hospital. Please 


RLTY._LTD.^_ 345-7721 

REltlL 


DUPLEXES 

1. OAK BAY AVE.-R3 _ 

Zoned and across tot e*raet Here's a BEST BUY. Attractive.' 
from commercial, this wqu-maln- newer no-step duetox on quiet 
talnad up and down duplex could street In Ylc Weef. ^a?v<ara ax- 
prove an excellent inveetmant. tgrtor. 2 Bedrooms. 1C00 ft- P*r ‘l? ?* 
Each eulte. has 2 edrms and fire- ‘»Tde. Great tor ownar occw»£ or Offua 
placet, awavs ranted. Priced to revenue. Unique Intartor, imsv to 1 
sail at 174.900. MLS | rant. MLS. Now afklng UffOO 

2. MODERN SIDE X SIDE j CROSLANb 

$49.900-0wner says sail so wa ra -1 ^ poyai Truat 

ducad tha price to below assaasad . — — - — - 

value. Situated on a quiet eul-de- APT Rl 'DTK 

sac across from Royal Roads In 1 I. DL-L/v^rv 

*.Idlng could 1 


! as suiter good mix with covered J43.900-. 
, swimming pool, twirl pool and 
<auna. Can oa converted to con 
I dominium Good financing ond 
j cwnar will carry back to sound 
covenant. 


eating' 

- __with f.nished 

immaculate. Offered at 


OAK BAY 
Lansdowne 

also Slope - * 

ffigg fu.ma. *s itTW5f..T JSWSTR 

ButidlfW. Fully eased ana C(<Xl4 L-rm w>tn sundeck o*i tame 



D F.H. Real Estate Ltd 

(559 McKENZIE AVE. 

MONKEY TREES’ 
2721 Asquith St. 
$53,900 

IMMACULATE 22-vr.oto 

__ ^ - --- i full-basement home mus' 

!7jto_ clean ^oadrooni noma with sal . Dr|va-ln garage and a orivatr 
T! 8 ' motftrn kitchen, eundack. Shrubs and trees i- 
;^S2T a . t# -• nd „ v * f V roufto tne house ano tn# oeckva'd 
^f«A r? 1 *!}* contains a terrific garden Convt 
.45-7721 CLIFF SALMOSD 477-2424 niant'v tocated in a vary ou'al 
area. Exclusive 

4 BEDROOM 477 W ED »43o 75 !Pgr. 3*»> 


BEDROOMS 

$44,900 


VIEWING HOLIDAY 
WEEKEND. $225,000. ML. 
BRIAN BROWN. 4TM667 


19 SUITES 

_ APPROVED 

4 , Oooe copntr tocation ctoaa to Town 


Drlva-in aerwa with automit c S cntr6 h • ,, 

«raa«raw» *“ tom * u l sk,." with 
GORGE AREA 


leaded trenched doors to separata 
d>nlng room. Old Country kitchen 
to cai'fig naturei wood 


resident T . 
and services. N( 

Phone 3*4-4515. _ 

T>m n7ce bright 

space, — ‘ ‘ “ ‘ 

square _ 

Ing Included. Only $190 
ncT^gaea required. 


Trailer Park 

.bVIW«!&*( 

buCSD TO $17540 


HERITAGE 
HOME 
$54,900 


Colwood, this building could be 4 1 n . eude eoartment OOv ana- 
su'tes (rent for $900 par month) or bedroom and 1 exceptional >oyt- 

strate-tltled. MLS For more Into r- room. 2 bath, owner suite). 4 with Oooc comef location cioaa h> icwn uvisui. rs isi-r x with "Poor "m r# n« Tn rx 

matron can now I tramandous ocoan vlaws to ax- , and country and Mayfair. Owner Fresnly painted, l-badroo-r home tr^ted glass cabti^t? Dii? 

,. .. GL^NN N'CHOLLS ce’ient condition, easy; mam tananoa. I ooojiger bulldlnq terms with, for tna retired or e emeu family, washer end aarnuritor ^Lailnd^ 

pto-5144 J«T-76*t Nrv ^. a vecancy. $21SA». ••^Y'smel' down payment. Asking L -rm with fireplace, lerpe kitchen, ^ U to >uM ha«J^f with 

T. L . Menn_4 Aseoc.afas- Ltd. 1 Thomdvcreff■ ff-*4*7. island ^< 0 . 000 . Ifull basement. \Nei" tread tot dose area and ddv^ oer^ Co^ —- — - - — r • 

nitbtrYVTTU 1 Homes Ltd., 3*4-7545._! IRV LIDSTONE 4H-«9*2 or to tranaao r tatton. Offered * t Vito mature Carven.ent Fernwood end Jc*'So" 

DU PLEX WITH A -—- - WAYNE BUTTERFIELD 3434401- $4t.0td ^ fruit treeTprlc^ to till ^cation close to town. Rtouced 

DIFFERENCE IJ'S A'<BEAUTY 3*4^434 an ytime. _j ^ ,formation thas. W7.W0. * C ^ * Jrom $59,000 to Ctoar. ML 34W 

^ w t 2> 4 l-blkdrolim^'unltt ,mm * cul * t# ' *«^ i0 S: 4 * ve#r *^ Developed 'five homaa, ptoaia call: MS-7721 KENT MACLEOD 595-4273 

Kiire Bur.uT Aee .e r AOOfOM. II 8CT88 owvmunv ^ wwd STAIRS: T >D8dr00ni uHitl -MA*rn ri,io*n FriOdti 8rvJ L/CVCIUUvvJ 

1 ,.. StrQta . NA/ ?. r ? h0 !i“_ huge lot 


PLU! 

REL_ 

Approx. 11 acres baai 


SiTJjMO 6 

lUtHvjliy ra 


Turn of tne cantorv charactor 
home otter I no 4 or 5 B.R.s wltn 
full bsmt. Presently used as light 
housekeeping rooms with convex 
sion to duplex a oood possibility 


PHIL WARREN. 477-7291 


«r,£r'L 5To'.« _ 

592-3342 or , Terrific opportunity tor # j rursl loci 

-resident owner w'ishing to max- - 

AVAILABLE NOW ... 1 W - * 


suites ranted at $175 each. This 
extra near naw property enjoys 
‘ :etion on ' 


owner wishing , to max- fording lovgiv views from 
I expend thto already Tn-. ^ 13 acre iot. Price It 


a n ‘unSU5 qSI« 8»" - *acra^«on. shipotng 

H3B»S®wws e e arwtriwr —*•» 

*!5..X*K i*n* horn*. L*. _ uV - Thf** c*,o***d *lw» 


PRIME RETAIL 
& OFFICE SPACE 
AVAILABLE NOW! 
CALL: 388-5365 

OFFICE 

950 so ft.-comprteln* 4 offices 
a large reception aro4, lmma< 
oossession, $350 par month, gri 
floor and plenty o» free part 
For Information 
592-3931 or Isle 
3*4-7545. 


Office suite approx. 750 sq ... ... 
.centrally located medical dental 
building, *2*0.00 par month. City 
Brokerage Ltd.. 3444547. 


RETAIL SPACE 
4 7.22 m. ft. at the 
ping Centra. Phone “ 




MORTOAQE LOANS 
and INSI RANX K 


■’ers’eq. ft )' office on malp 
[own antra ma^jireeantty ranted 


caa pus 
1 mad lata 
iround 
king. 1 


foresting pperatlon. Now offtrad 15^00 to *125.000. Make your offer TJLNOFYTRn 

2* Att5^JU%£?S •* STRATAW^EX 

.MLS MWxpultt 015 , > XX. 0 -y ^|jTIU"S~*Wii'M]k oml 

Whipple Tree Inn lakexibivdlttjx : lw”' 1 **’ 

Restaurant TA^arnniw ^^'^riiTNrw KAOTPI 
i MU ' tL 


RIPE FOR 
THE PICKING 


MORTGAGE 

NEEDS & WM.&- 


or 3454771 (anvt.ma)- 

THE HANDYMAN 
CAN 

Make an attractlva home of this 
$ bedrm. bungalow with ?3'xl2' 
L-rm. with fireplace and solarium. 
On thoh lot 40*x214', partly tread 

Wtet&r ^ ^62. 

CORDOVA BAY 
RIDGE 

quiet cut-de-eec with 


LARGE WORKSHOP 
3 BEDROOMS 


MODERN 
2 BR. 
CITY 


All useable land on this 154x244 

‘ct with renovated 3-oedroom rleen ...._ > 

noma with a full basement. Tnere £5°^" ,? * 4 ^ e ,^f LM 
IS a mlnitoarn tor horse lover and °ctJ?iKucrc* 

a double bay wired workshop. Va- 0 construe, 
cent end must be so'd. 0«er, will !•?!'" a5g£ 

“4*SmSs < »<.!>V "‘'™ “ ri '* f OflyTSi' IOI 


itimVcufF sal'wo-.d ,nout 


*led»to , *i 

ive 1 «o • 


PHIL WARREN 477-7 


Deacribaa this 3 br. two storav.: view. A nlctly let 


SPANISH 
ARCHITECTURE 


N'EW ' 
ESQUIMALT’ 


ss tsiie .irwisriMa «. t 

*oie. it ygu have triad to obtaift a rvTmvATtnvAi 
! conventions! mortgage and were IN l LKINAllL>i>AJj 

Prim. L oration ! Lrn,<1 ^ *° Cr#d,t Pr0 * > ' CUISINE 

- r — - l * ms ' or not 9novtoh equity in your 

,e. Finance property w« may b« si ‘ 


lompietton 
.. tinisned area 3 t.a 
Kinsmen Perk area 

rec room im 


FIRST TIME OFFERED 

'200 SQ. FT. _ 

Would suit Gov t. Office, Finance 
Co., or Rael Estata Co. For fur¬ 
ther details call 3*4-3494 (24 hr*.) 

CENTURY 21 Waitarn Homes 
1037 Ctovardala A va. 

-1 (24 hr*.) 


PRIME LOCATION. NJAR NEW 
building, close In, only one txock 
off Douglas, ample parking, good 
access front and rear streets, Waal 

ssrskjunrsfcxSg 


Prime Business 
Space for Rent 


- Sidney. 400 eg. ft. 
area for further Into 


rooarty wa may be able to halo. 
Courtasv to fellow brokers 
CALL 

CLIFF JOHN50N 
382-8215 

First Victoria Financial Oorp. 




DISTINCTIVE DECOR 
AND 

LOCATION 

$125,000 

further dafai!* to sortoua an- 
qulriaa. 

sc®“t«w.w« xa 

__Block Broa. Realty Ltd. 

VANOOUVER ISLAND 
SOLD OUT' 

9 ttorpt sold In 4 months... 

An exclusive oartnarshlg opportu¬ 
nity wlto first rights secured on 
tha bast Vancouver location is 

-.. —“—to. iiMwlrg new! 

» excited about 
this new franchised bus' 

‘ * ms of this offer. 


i be strafe tmed. 

384-7521 PHIL SIMPSON 595-1*43 
BOORMAN INVESTMENT CO. 

412 FORT ST. 


3-Pce. 


towns and levlL ... 
Ing $235,000. Call me 
LILLIAN WII 


lit AND 2nd 
MORTGAGE LOANS 

SOOKE - GULF ISLAND* 

Wa specialise In Land and 
Land Development Mortgegaa 

*«""• *""" Ijy cy 'JZgzy E7«! c south oak bay 

xw!£i t ?A* ;i T v^f T A° N m t ttpr'» ?r?5^ SEAVIEW 

lowest Payments Avaltooia this new DUPLEX 

Call Mr. Douglas Hawkes C 01 U 
3*4-712* ' - 


ROCKLAND 

McClure 


while you watt. Present your vv . 

1 w mls awe 

LIUM# "'■I WWT»|Il ItuiTCOWXNY | | j 


lOUMcCLL-RE 

REVENUE 

_ for • housekeec 

plus owner's 2 bdrm suit 


wEoiwritLjfcv. mooo? Wfijv fctiLVf atm sw jBffl'janwa SmSt^S 6 ^*Tigsy*R l '.r aaradZhr iszi'r 

CLIFF HALAYKO 
_ >u-nn i p<t r 

CP 

Charman Pacific 

Realty Ltd. 

toe Broughton Street 


separata entrance. Prlca 1 $105,000.00 

MLS 34514. To view phone TER- 1 ; 

jRY EDEN 3*4-3494 ( 24 hrs.)_110.8U) SQ. FT. 

MODERN • YEAR OLD.’siDE BY COOK STREET 
. w.. „ . . ,. ^duplex, torga living room. RT70VABLE 

mve^uwi\u kltcnon. laundry, storaoa room and 
I stately meneton By a^itact ^ai^hr^ ^ maf^f^. 3 To Multi R**. and domraeiv 
Samuel Meetura contain* 7 — 1 ■*- Tei LeTu^“uraoM. dad Mix 

contained suites. 5 with fireplaces, 1 ^ v !° ^ 

Situated in quiet seclusion on il3 
acres amid huge traaa. *PBctow» fiaSgg^Jstfu* ** 
town* and lavish shrubbery. Ask -1 — 


ai-rm -WjKjto-jw BlVi 


It leaf at 
3*4-4144 

iar *7*. 


. ... &&&&> &5«A««Jur s Z 

iF '"Coffee Shop iWi|^:¥l S 


t oarkina. 


tornood Shopping 
deveioomant food store, 
sq. ft., drug store, shoo store, lad¬ 
les fashion, hardware storav ba¬ 
kery. Sand inquiries to P.O. Box , 
940 Quallcum Beach. BNt. VCR 
2T0._ 


I RLTY' 


Ground 
a busy 

S5S?A. 


RETAIL OR OFFICE 
a door commarctot space m 
1 Esquimalt shopping square. 
IX. 1200 so. ft. p )••*• eali 


TO RENT: IN UP5TAiR5 OF 

•lactrlcal flrrn. 172 square faet of 


two floor*. Rear loading on lower 
- ^ par- 


GLENGARRY 0 REAlV 
NVESTMENT CDRPOR/ 

_479-nj* 

MORTGAGES 

tsf ahd 2nd mortgaae loans 
hendtod quickly and atficton'ly 
with flexible tarma and payout 

Pf - V jTS l JOWN B SON! LTD.. 


building In Quadra area 
owner management, 
antes end electric 

XJI uwer W "1 """ MT.irw gww- fTV. Amp e 

1 • um.vl money j j i n money I ‘■ EVE 5i8ij*‘ 

■ EL? v,iMlrf b ' mmc,iv * °“'Sr 5: ” ,v w-j—■ 

6ieSo , ASf*V°liEALly 1 R00^7AR IE ^4 E ftn75l^^^°*^^— " 

investment co»4?«»tion 592-1768 384-8075: rv ,, cv 
-- pAGER 310 I SXS DUPLEX 

Soosprov ProparBas L td. 89 5-3151. SdVYUU .T - di^rrvc- nThav TO 

f»Vo K »unv R eouiouad^tots of^'poten- GREAT POTENTI AL 1 c GOVERNMENT BLDGS. 

! flat, go 

good to 

Beacon 


, JOHN^iklCOTT 

p'ealspan PROPERTIES^ 


ESQUIMALT 

industrial 

10271 Iq. Ff. lot toned light Indus¬ 
trial. House rants at S275JW par, 
month. Good holding property or 
development. 

BRIAN SPARK 

COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT 
PEMBERTON, HOLMES LTD. 


ment roughed In for 27 ft. rec. 

*54-142* rm.. iiundrv rm. and another 

bdrm. ,4 x 13 ft., workmen. The'l'. 7 * ' 
swimming pool to included In tha 
.price of $67,900. Please call 10 

:; , L’s c »5^ , in i Ti& c r.’i:: a»n'?'v»i'T l ss!!?uoo ^ 

ThrougtohaJt elan, L-shaped L-rm 
and D-rm., convenient kitchen with 1 
utliihy and sun room off, 2! 
badrm*., and bathrm make up 
main floor plan with further devel¬ 
opment in basement. Including r#c. ! 
rm. wftti fireplace, etc. Immacu 
tote condition throughout. Situated 
on a vary attractlva tread tot 
tocated a short walk to the Cedar 
mil Golf Course and shopp'ng 
area. Offered at *49.900. Call now. I 
you’ll be glad you did. 

DOUG LAWSON 


VALLEY 

VIEW 


WE INVITE YOU 
TO DRIVE BY 
671 JONES 
TERRACE 


irmlng 4 1 
to. $94,000. 

T i?.**£r.?.v L«”' u ' «,» U«im «,« Wi ? IM 

—" *0 maintain building. Fuf, orVa McDonald Park Rd. gqd 

$79,500. tor mere info, phone view (North End corner). 


GORGE AREA 

suite apartment fully 
> parking 


479 3*44. CASTLE PR' 


sm 


^harming bungalow over lookinq 
S95-24I4' Panama Fiat* and Otymo'c moun¬ 
tains on a quiet street. Compact 

PORTAGE INLET laUTVBMUtUS: 

'uS, L'J S5T , i™WSi'"'SS"» 

_ ■ wirh” t«NlllT‘ 1 ^liwifll’i Lli g.H, ' ou*e N,M> so-i* wo- peoltoa too.® in atv.t tot® rw 

3S4-B124 oJSUSi dating An excellent starter m » with i.ixurous w-w cafpeto 

-l52KSt1h?2Sfto, matg toTs a* ^ throuphoui. this home feature.' 

ideal home tor ahtluua furniture. ** 0,,, T 00 ... __ 

Thera are 4 large tedrms on the sAnVvafiwFi 

CLOSE TO AIRPORT , LTT ftg* M 

w *!» •m-x.T.fWSSS; ' - - - - - ;;: »~:.yw 

-- *-- s 5 n — 

:ka« 


ZONED 

UC»rr INDUSTRIAL 


__I_ PHcad 

_ X at $235,000. MLS. Call: RICK 

^'L 5 !J(f N .. w WUr^ r 

time 


DOUG LAWSON AN'O 
JOE RICKARD 
315-1771 (anytime) 


Waterfront 


L-room with fireplace, attractive 
k »chan and In-line din room - 3 
bedrooms. 4 pea. vanity batr 
Large sundeck — 21x12 rumou« 
room. Just that little difference 
that w'll apoeel to you. CAM L. 
MARSHALL. 3(>«7&5 or 479-3234 


742 


_ available immediately 1 

let and 2nd mortgages. Contact: 
davld burr ltd. 


11910, fully equipped, toto of |«tan- 
' I, good location, askino $49,900. 
laase, or sell property. 2437 
n Ave.. Sidney, V*L 1X7. 
454-5502 or 454-3241. ask for 

Maurice. 


tS4 


MORTGAGES 
FOR SALE 


*5-7751 , 

OPPICE 

1100 Blanahard Straaf. 2 0 ! 
available *50 sq. ft., *225 — 
month, perfect for small busfnasa. 

E wiW» -—-■•■ _ 

K: ® 

Don M®cOWUyr®v 

GLJNGARRV REAL TV _ _ _ 

INVESTMENT CORPORATION Plus itoex 3*3-44i 



You have 2 unfinished floor* raadv 

tor dayfiopmant. 2 -- 

eacn side wtth bale-- 

lay Views. .45 Of an acre of .land, 
Liva-ln owners have built 


AVAILABLE 
multi-acre auto 
mant of Casino 

Srasrs»Ar 


IMMEDIATELY 
0 salvage develop- 

jjgfr to 


EARN FHOM 


a'^n^r. 

1 . 3 o.m., 


profitable busines*. the 
only one of It* kind on Vancouver 
Island. Good return on your Inveet- 
manf. Victoria Prase Box 2, 


loot annually, 442-3572. 

.‘.ARE HO 1)5^ SPACE JUBILEE 


Jve-ln owners have built and wlli 
consider trades. Viewing enytlme. 


GOVERNMENT 


OAK BAY BORDER 

Wal 1 but It on lar|a 


lot. SxS duplex. 

vw Sa 

>r met ton on this 


ms each 

Ing proeartv. Only —.— 

34927. For full Information ..- 

and many other duplexoe please 

995 1535 OLGA ZACHARY 992-2246 
Boorman in veet mant (*-* 1 
W45 Cadboro Bay Rd. 


GEORGIA PARK TERRACE 

exceptional 

EXECUTIVE HOME 
PANORAMIC VIEW OF SEA 
' A INS 


TAX SHELTER DUPLEX 
3 year old side br side duplex. 
Mill Bav, 114 acraa, 2 badrooms 
and full basamdnt u ^ 

m. isbElL** 



Property avaliaoia in choice 
Burnside area with potential 
tor Light Industrial or Service 
industrial uses. Excellent 
corner site. For further details 

CAPITAL CITY REALTY LTD. 


i 471-5321. __ 


INDUSTRIAL LOTS 

,*31500 


gisitsr 

—One acre lot, I tot au 
aofanti#!,- 


DISTRESS SALE 


IB 


.BY OWNER, SIDE BY SIDE DU- BILL MORRIS 
ix. In axcal.iant rqntal ar“ “ 


__subdivision 

I9C 000 

KujsuxsajK 

[no on fto^tof, *90,000 par^actoL 


4272 LYNNFIELD 
OFF CEDAR GIEN] 
ONTEMPORARY CAP E 
LOCATED IN ONE OF VIC 

‘A fin|»t Jklw — 

LL LANDSCAPED • 

T WnH A PULL’ 

CK YARD; DOUB 


baagata. 707 Esquimalt Rd.. . MS___ 

I Victoria s Harbour waiarfront with AND MOUNTAINS 

1 a vary la roe indoor-heated swim- Four levels allow privacy for tanvi- 
mlng pool and hydro therapy poo iy actlvihas. Main toval includes 
; Mature adults only, no pets. Avail- living room with firaoiaca and bay 
—Oct. 1 L«a 2 bdrm Suita I window, adjoining dining room 


AyS. SHO.JO. Also toe. 1 bdrm sulto with french doors to porch and 
[IaJ *203. tocludea beat and cab'avl- iproa encioaadpatio. k'tcnan (C. 

mt: ston. Resldmt Manager 3i3-i73T tallon cabinets, built-in dlshwas*. 
fCED #r 284-6100. Diamond Develop- *«-, «tc.) Elegant spiral stalrcasa 


f l 2Vy 

' niwvwia I IS EVI 

?Sr T F\J X *H Eft H ?nS)RMAT IOS 

^rB^'flsnatw 

INV. 3*5-4124. 


1 GROCERY STORE. DOWNTOWN | privacy. In the 50’s, 
'arta. 3 yaar^ J*^9'- Asking *3 000 5*6-2231 .Bob Hahn 


its- ap*."* ss po« Mix ' jg are w. sa^tq 


owner. Side x rda duplex One from M50 „ 

595-1*42 bedroom cloaa to siora*. bus. rec. > vai'tofkl 3U-4271. 3S4-21 

.' - ... ■ ^ “ - “one ahd 


BY OWNER; CUTE 2 BEDROOM 
Ibvneelow, ins'de ranovatad. clesa 
I to buaes. school* and snapping 
| 47**97*4. 



* ''Pboaia Helping Paoato'' 

Naar sfora. achoal and Panoramic 
Laftu^ — 


__... Elegant l.— —- 

cp to der,. main bathroom, three 
badrooms. (Master bedroom nas 
full bathroom ensulta. orivato sun- 
deck off.) Down to spacious pan- 
aired entrance nett, large rumpus 
room with sliding doers to petto 
and back garden, laundry room, 
two piece bathroom. Staircase 
down to tower level.. Including 
workshop, storage areas, large 
•xtre tedroom or hobbv room, 
small sewing room. Many o»har at 
tractive features in this un'aue 
ho me. Asklnq *125,000. MLS. 
Frank Carr 3*5-9745. 


Bill Wonnacott 454-5373 c« Mr * SU .900 6i»-*4il 


r.oma. 5S3 500. 454-5132. 


f RICKAI 


_ . *uto Centra.-A good 3toadrm. 

home with naatad shoo, parage _ 

and graanhousa on a l-Acrt lot (Open to view Sat. Sun., 1-4, co- 
wfth »rult tree* and /taPt gar wood. 3 cadroom*. soma with fir*, 
dan. Owner hes bouoM. MUST BE Ip'aca. Turn down Jenkins pff Jac*<- 
“^‘.Dl Asking $63,000. MLS. tin, ie<f on Gien Lake Rd. than r*-* 


656-1629 on toct 




V. L R! 


or ♦urtnar inf©. 




** vv 






Jasr 


















































































































































































V 


A 


ta Hours ro« SAi.r. jj« not st« tor mi.e :m houses tor sale 

COUNTRY LIFE 
14 6 ACRES 
$139,500 


an oak »ay A*e. 

595-5131 

S57,900 


BOORMAN'S 

n 


•It Nrta 

sN-mi 

»«ca4tor«inM 

W8-1M5 


!5B HUl SE8 l\)R SAI.R 

JACK HEARS 
OAK BAY REALTY LTD. 


•ill HOUSES FOR SALK. :*) HOUSES FOR SAi.r 


DAILY COLOMSr ViotaM, B C , *Umxi*> Sc^tembtf J, 19VS 

HOI SES FOR SALK 33t HOUSES FOR SAl.k. 2BB HofsKS FOR »ALI 


COUNTRY LIFE - 14.4 ACRES — I I 
$130 MO 4 B.R.s. 3 both*. 2 F.P.v | I 
Present owners ere forced to toll 


1761 HAULTA1N 


»t*4 OM MV 

Where Trvet * m# Bests 
of All B • 


l Business 


ister 

s Teen- 

L sneoed dink* __ ... 

L'lck fireplace, full htoti 


rle. Aoorox. 1 300 sq. ft. on mein 
’eatunng large L.R *tth most a* 
tractive F.P. Format D.R. Is 

US OAK BAY-CLOSE TO 
ik.e ret. rwm wtth ?nd t-.P. SAFEWAY AMD BUSES 


OPEN HOUSE 
i*AT. l:3tM SO 
4133 CAREY RL\ 

inferior 2 **/yT Excellent tv maintained S-vear-eidI nke” rec- r«m"with 2nd V.P., SAFK\?AY AMD BUS US 
i-size kitchen leroe fMrm. home on nicety lendaceoeo finished 4fh B.R. or den. 2 more 

■ ilvine rtMi'n *.t fenced lot. PiMiani’view from routed. Could be ib-l*w suite. ML $jl.W0 

ih basement upper level. • Bright kitchen has 30551. Two oufculidlncjs. Good Wen 

e a lone dining nook end huge sundeck. crazing lend. Good holdinq proper 

very good Extra large master bedroom, ty may be vour opportunity. R# 

home end grounds. Ap Lovely rock flreplece in nvlng duced $10 000 for quick sale. Good, 

rtthrouff: room, another brick fireplace In holding property Hurry, norry 

E OELAHUNT 592-9224 hug* rumpus room. Two toll ■ Going, going . . 

b athr ooms. Ground level oasemem cliff Anderson 477 ju 

with foyer entrance. Ample oar* 

LAKEHILL 


FOR SALE 


Royal Trust 


«77-#9B1 


OPEN HOUSES 


FOR SALE 


Royal Trustl 


«7V#U1 


BLOCK 
BROS. 


NEW GORDON HEAD! 
STRATA DUPLEX 

AjJprox. 1400 M). ft. 2 storev 3 
oedrooms, 7 bathrooms. Lend 
scaped! Close to Lembrick Perk 
end all school*. $64,9uo 


SELL THRU VIDEO 
OPEN NIGHTLY 8 P.M. 

OPEN HOUSE 


$34,000 . * 

Gorge area. Spotless 170 sq. tt 
cottage on fenced 50x133' lot. 2nd 
oedroem m attic, separate garage. 
Near-new roof end H.W. tank. 

3-*S794 L ' BHI Rempie 477-1941 


JACK MCAJtS 
OAK BAY REALTY LTD, 


tlM OM BAT NSHi 

Where Trust le the Bas s 
of AJl Bustness 


OPEN HOUSE 

Saturday 2-4 


S36.500! 


■ nq, 
non 
5*5-1535 


rEanmw 

IJ OLGA IAChMY S 


Light induetrlel zoning would allow 
-ome commercial use with this 
Old Character Home Riant down 
’own so that you can walk to 
..ork or theatre. No transportation 
required here. Step over the 
mreshoto end step beck In time. 2 
adrooms, living room. 

' rooiece. dining room 
Very smell easy cere k. 

•lets Studio In rear. Clean 

charming. _ ._ _ 

LORNE DOYLi 47* 9994 tee 

Gordon Head 


OPEN SAT. AND SUN. 

2-4:30 

664 RALPH ST. 

U ACRE SECLUSION ^ h<(re 

$59,500 — 1500 sq. ft. model t_ „ 

n "J* 2 ml I This is very special - 2 bedrooms 

lot with Ar loft overlooking family room. \ i °'£* r c ,®^ r 

Cl«n MimMl J*. «5*|SJ. , pS* -ST.«r«T». ' 

SVtWJr JSL 21 &£BUt3gZi*mm 
& §- gK e w%?n u Ie c . k g awiassS^^artw; 

MS-1535 GAIL WEiNBtKU « on th|# ^ New ML For #Ktra 

pleas* cell _ 


3085 couquitz 

SATURDAY 'M p.m 

2-oedroom Lovely character home In sec- Mr . .. - — _ _ 

ilysituat- lot backing onto perkadloie.rg i • |, J £ffifr E *DjK^uRST > INDUSTRIAL LOT 

ed tor those who do not drive. Coiguttz river. 2 tadreone up, 1 ^ 44-400< rvv>t.'is: uni RS' Pleasant little 2 bedroom no step 

close to at) amenities. Lovely' down, leroe living reem with fire- OPEN suhaetey.- wi»h e large seoaraie ^ , . » f* . 

wo'' kept comtor^eoie ryyi e piece and hardwood floors. Rk ■ Ai^irvinj j*rege set on e 5400 sq ft -dus A 1 1 Wornn St 

ms r%z. isCt® ~tu pattkrbonru ^ eron bt - 

SS «5»xrHi , ’ M '" ,UTH a,05LA ^ s ‘" 1 £? sat. ftswas^, Oak Bay - 

25SSS .C tSWJ5/8' -252 JAMES WHITE BLVD. fgm. ♦ *»? =<gTA WkST SSWVSS * ’« .T. .. Y 

seen Ineide. For viewing cell SATURDAY 1.30-4:00 pTm. nem I 900 sq. tt finished - drive ncme end this tour level spilt In WW j I Iq\A/C 

COLLEEN HOPWOOO el . byll 11 Joiiv^ then cell to view. seenUiton is one t believe you UPLANDS VV I I IL7VV j 

5P2-I523 or HAROLD WHilEY !3?her D himiiv J ef > ST JOHN MORRY Slfl "ke. 3 bedrooms with shower rvyi avtai Close to the ocean on e eu let freed 

at M2-27W S5?USl end ap^ Royal Trust s M-1001 tn ^ suite. HMtM.tor f, replace COLONIAL Sr5t W Tr!li Jbedroom“iv» bath 

;SifsS3fe&S „ £?#&* iSFJ'ls MS * SSSiS, , SfaftS»K£ 

iturtno vaulted 
p^ad o 
ifructlon, 


4BRs- I 
CUSTOM 
Bfts -1 Vi BATHS 


over oa> 

....n, formal • 

_ large rock welled! 

r jtk> with attractive slate faced, 
ioor Large beautifully landscaped 


. . - i a«d rec r#om ; ii 2 acres. 2 .. . 

Neened on beautiful pounds, i ^wh ^'’ST^aS £d SSrV ^ ^ Z? 

unique proeHTty C****]^ ±£ 2 L l‘^f 0 


OAK BAY TUDOR cliff Anderson 
Charming home with 2 pdrme on 

St JSggi. S&1 ROCKLAND 

•j zSrJSm ssr'TSZ impressive 

,") n pn ^|.n 2-4 30 °'^ T rnust U4S00 mJ> I Original STONE FENCE wrought 

J DWWTI Rancher. No stairs for $Wd535 QL&A ZACHARY 592-2245 3CATE^SPLI^L^fT t home. | 

12SrSS»l QfSnSZ Nkiw 

, n.OOO s^. tti OAK BAY HOMES appointed bn a baautlfuliy land- 

S 2 BUXT. WStS' fS I St -5S; 

SSts, pgr' 506 1 


PANORAMIC SEA VIEW 
CEDAR AND STONE 
5234 HANOV r ER PL. 

OPE>N HOUSE 
SAT 3-4'30 

tsssna *>- ww 

rt.wv.iw -hss-i-^ass* . !^r!3a'K v *^StASSlS Maa «! 


sunny half acre garden with dis- \ 'zll Mn z 

tent mountain views Rscegtion • ^^rr^otRrs 

haH. 74 drawing room, formal din- \*'22L V™,?' 'iVVenoT*’ 
^.M^T'roTm ^ edioln^ Sm ' ™ ^dKST °G^bVy* McLEOD 
X drila^f 59t m4 ^ B€TTv AAc^^RlAND 

fifhrimT. 3 *flr h M»|.c l L ?P, * Ct extri :^*»27. Oftica 591-3321 
bedrooms end full bathroom in j 
plus R.l. recreation! 
epiace Douce 
.Tuf J ‘ 


$67,500 
1820 San Juan 


een end colorful. 11,000 sq t 
of greenhouse end sned. Lot* o* ^ 

IjRN?' DOYLi 479-9094 


lidro^T* '^ious v'rW soai "etuV barge etteched 592-97To john MORRY 

5SR, ’flWTBVsB UAK BAY- VILLAGE 

spacioue sun room overlooking from comar ©» noacon ano rm E#r|y jOfh Century charmer, wen 
formal garden. MLS 34449 To Ave. /uuiftWFv meintamee over the ywrs fas, 

V£w ^^Jeaee^ call GIBBY _SHARON MOONEY__ tefuiiv decorated - uodated ser 

swSlfi a J nytime; 2948 CEDARH ILL RD. end" turrgi T1 '(ba7 r wfndowi. Arckwqy ecytivc resldence pes^no o^to^^o^; | parage. Workshoo ^ull driveway. 

-ejvn. mountain 1 :sm:m P . m. SlLW A .fcjrta 8JT- ” Vg&£r™ck .: 

® city views M "‘” m - m '\ 

B&S3LS.®“SSafSK" 1:30 - 4:00 

*»y ensuite A supertiv constructed end dt 2Q ] 0 C* HtYini IQ 
mdrv room slgne<J B avar,eh reeiden.e ..,tn JO I / '^UrTlUUb 
t windows, wood-liqnf _ 
archwevs. baronial f rQ , 
solid beam decor. I t; b. 


aaurrmaa ’arjs 

irvEis,^ °* H ‘" 


OPEN HOUSE 

Sat. & Sun. 


Gordon Head 

$74,900 

Corner let offer-ng qood seclueten 
and potential for a lot of parklna 
This 3 bedroom end den. 2 
aathroom home has the core area 
built around an Atrium which can 
be seen from the entrance end 
A io from the cozy clean tire 
olaced living room, its a oogt end 
-earn home with evervtnmg on the 
on* floor. Good a roe by Mt. Douq 
/l 35239. Salespeople please call 
me lor a ppointment! 

UORNE DOYLE • 479-91*4 

V 2 Acre 


I JIA_ 

j M. STAPELLS 

* SAANICHTON 
$61,500 


with FETE* 1 
592-3471 


•d. *42.900. MLS — 

2—3-Bdrm character home, 
basement 13*4 *q. H. w. o 
60x120 secluded lot. $45,900. 

i-BMutifuT^meintalnod end updat¬ 
ed 3-bdrm home, with full base¬ 
ment. Excellent location to vendors bansttrred - sorry to ^ ___ 

park, school and buses. $71,500.; i ta v« the*r lovely 3 -bedrm., fun CLOSE TO 
MLS 34974. basement horn*. Very brioh* end cr\rticnYC.«VARv' 

4 —Large 4 bdrms. full baeemert. I neat On cul-daaac - only x 51 MPbU.VvaLAK> 

bungalow In area of perks, j min*, from town. 10 min. to it 

school, buses end well lend-1 Oort, ferries. Near recreation 

scaped homas. $76 500. MLS centre. To view, cell 

34749 For any of the above MILDRED STAPELLS or JIM 

plus II others, cglf' PARK 

GORDON ADAMS 314-1075 314 1075 

595-1535 597-1353 pgr 506 PQr 4«3 


vtowB. - -- - -- - -- GORDON HEAD 

. - - - , .j perfclv constructed and ue 

sruoyj. Beamed I'ving room ^ -. .._u«rg« countered laundry room signe<1 Bavarian residence. v;,tn . 

w.th large itooe frepiace din 1*1 STEVE MOONEY 477^197 1 B ^.j!^«J - 7^JL‘^??lt*heat'. RL R«creat>on /oom^rtn bed ;vjmed glass windows, wood ' qr,» 

ing room with patio oH, krtctv stevt mwrvcT M*chfnf*ti, ipet tba t^kat, haw- room intercom, .full electric he^ windows. —-- -- * 

4* ^ Witt. oreakfest room u , aTBir «nJ|4YDR «^3 thefmopane wHndows, underground ary. _ _ 

rooms have 

cxjhles and periioa. being or- 1 gowni.. 1 I<rm ». crf«^^T»ACL’LAR 


w WTcnen e.e rw e ^ Te<j .\ v . fllfofd 
hava'aasyaccS'to bal'-1 Beautiful 3 vr. old. 4 bedroom (1 ] floors el" updated, situated on a j. 

_ end patloT &ng o 4 down). Tudorof 24& sq. It., tale-; treed lot in Cotwood. Asking A 

»ered at $m.0C0. (MLS). Fur fully decorated imrrjocu'ate, $59,900. SPyuT. 

ther Information end view mo tt-rougnojt. 3 baths, 2 fireplaces, MARGARET JOHNSTON 
...-HASH 599 3321 or •**» family -■ 


Southern ex pc: 
Olympic plews 
end landKM 


ijrtsssktgsiv 

and dryer. This horm 
tender fovinq car*. Sta. . 
an otter ont3l,QQ0. Call PH YL 
US COUTTS et 599-3321 or c»T 1-4 
479-5414. 


Utility off kit cnar 
^.^Dsure eun deck with 
lews. Comoiattlv ter cud 
id ond gardened 

iwactfiS 


Good value at 
v. din MURRAY 

wisher 477-0191 

_ _ naerts DALE YOUNG home mu«t be sean ' 

fovjnq^cart. ^StaH wIth 4779191 3M-4275 oeger 2541 ft^Askln^ *135^0^ 


4770393 


v—, .... w,,. 

floors, grand living room with j m 

view balcony, end a fully eaulp.^ed SrtPr -1 ' y 

on - kitchen with edloininq femlly-cum- JOST- end BEAM construchon 

477 1743 CX>RDOVA BAY \TEUS . creakiest room. Separate bedroom ^ to* tnRconHackor ^ 
uumwiDPTirF n'ing, 3 bedrooms, master large iLVf w a ^!Tt 

\ms-pvr?rvNTT HANOVER PLACE with firepiece. tun ensuite. and , n r /4 !^* 

W ATUvFRUNr Saf , 2 to 4 Unique ,3 bedroom private sundeck with unique «»<5- P ri< Hae. ^ylrt-tn oven and wove 

1602 MTT.TVA LuVNE cedar and stone chalet " designed ,ust»bie privacy screening, 3 *'re- ^?. d ronnVp; ' 

_ , i’ . *~TI2 rnnrn ham. an and oui»1 in 1977 to taka full ad o-eces. Doude ' Arched' carport 'wt GOOOiEs. Seemq Is be. e. 

»* a ventage of the superb see view This residence is truly unique to IJlv , Fo waK»m 

huge wetertromjjt location ExceJtioneiiy well con- Victoria, and is offered at Silt.aW MARJ NAPP€R 

^ ■ str’eted wtth post and beam in the Further details availed*. ,MUNN at 594-3321 

g$!35 0» entertainment •ree.^beeuttfully or -1 Resjdenca _ Qttice 

AL MA¬ 


IM 


MA 


Subdividable 
Gordon Head 


CRAFTSMANSHIP 
MARGARET HAY 

Superior home. Built with onde. 
superb becx garden. 

on mein floor plu- 

’uii levels. Two 
Famili 


INVESTMENT 
A'NO 

■olir^ 5 ^ 0 ^ aco/5\modation 

h*thror»m k pi^iiw 5 adjacent older bungalows, dose 

D^^ttke t(S» bIbuX orSSSSi ,0 *** hold,n ® pr °S ef,,e * 

ann^mptura^rMML i ^hn present gross revenue of over 
.S 350»6 
HOLMI 


ATTENTION POST AND 
BEAM LOVERS! 

You'll love thi» unique home 


Rk' MACKENZIE 

GET SETTLED FOR 


to be eppreci- £Sr 1 aGm*nt area.Jbeeutifully or —-- 

f pr\ .cl 5057 gamzsd kitchen with family room 599-1420 Ted Weltord 

c J . ... -n k.i,Mw nil mattar 


595-4594 off, "private balcony oft master 
cadroom and always the vtowHI 
Come and see this ercltinolv dit 
fe'ert executive home ottered at 

til^Rsmpie Oft. 

UL I- 6S4-S794 47? 1S4T 599-1420 


viewing can 
or AMKIE 

OPEN HOUSE 


477-llil 

PANOR AMIC SEA i 

VIEWS 

mounttolmcl ' 1237 Munro St. 


ENGLISH GARDEN 


...th ore. .. 
$115900. MLS 
itCall: JOHN “ 


MS AT 394-7521. 


______ t over 

$615 per month Homes neve ? 
fcd r ms.. antique F.P.s in L.R. end 

Ht you want enouoh land to supoert d#n family kitchen with pantry^ 

5&.-UT XS&Af'A X more for less ^7.2 t&A' r S^Si»VS 

name Ranch style with pertlei You won't find a more beautiful each piroeprty. EXC. 53* end 540. 
aa>ament Well insulated with eco- houM on as large a lot. Located In For further information, please 

nomlcaI hot water h#*t. $77,500. Quoenswood #r*e on j of an acre call ___ 

' L15215. is a spW level leeturlna large BILL BATES, 394412A 592-4077 


tORNE DOYLI 


Top Area 

Executive Home 
Seaview 
Gordon Head 

has good 
end y 


Queenswopd area on .5 of 

_ is a soils level leeturlna l 

479-9994 lB's, modarn kJtehin, dintag 
-is. Wall Tepr herat 


92:1 iVRCADIA 

harming 2 bedroom home in tne 

,orge area. Large ilyng room ^ H L C K THESE 

on'a quiet street in' Coiwaod. iMflfig^erea. 0 Nice 4 pee. bettv Fun STANDLNG OPEN Sjl 900 

It's warm, open end interest-. tamt. w th 'sundry area end rec VALUES AND CALL NOW Urts* Wi.lM 

inq tnrouqhout Its 1200 eg. ft. 3 room. Low, low down. In often , Y7,.r-.nnr.Vi 3 BDRMS 

tAdreems on mein wltn a de-1 dance___ i '• V*L* K & XZr' caT XQ 300 pu _ 

^Srsll PrlUne"tilled 479-1599 PE ER TE * 394-1001 Anxious Broaomeed Vendor otters ^3 PEARCE CRES. Offer want9d ^' %rdtn ..... - - 

catio idael tor small cNidren 2 bedroom, 2 bathroom unique 00 this full bsmt. home eolft stone ^ks Mcluded lawn areas, oaks / / r\r\r\ 

olev^no *iaiei?^or entertelrlng otkn Kk'VDAL AVE benetow for only $99 500 . 2 fire- p.p v .*-w carpets . ocen stvle 4n d evergreens. Reception hail VAA Wl¥] 

Custom-bul't V extractive " land- 2150 KENDAL AVt. p)ac# , Wor ^. Fu'l basement., M f f ran with dining area plus rac dinln# room, living room. 2 oed -PLHJ, 7UL7 

»C4D ! ng. Immecuiett, solid end SATURDAY 2-4 t Quick sale wanted. 2?T, n , u^n 595144 ? rooms 00 ’**• m * ,n floor end e just a tew steps from me oeacn 

noeccatie In and out. The uooer Lansdowne - ott^Mdarson , & w , mm ina m32i1 Boo Harm 595 1M? ?i merb master bedroom wtto ad- ^ tne oast dam digging on Van 

t a lament is lust waltlna tor _ v^^T^MerkeLZ^C>wn«r S 2. ^ f 1 or )« v ,# ^r^?' ' -m ,vonm- reading room and itudv! C ouver island ‘ 


stucc 


on Mount Tolmie with seclu-; C . A . , O A 
and panoramic viaws of »ha jUnQQV L - 4 
and islands, a timper and / 

y country styled residence an- H —a. D— . 

Pat- Bay - 


living 1 


end 


ec comma 


. family 
Its In a 


......__ __.iBPBtWDB 

floor and exertiv decorated 
throughout. Unique front yard — j 
nuge private beck yard. Asking | 
$49 900. Open h> offers. 

346-7521 WYNN WRIGHT 477-1909 

ONE OF A KIND 
ENGLISH CLASSIC * 
TEN MILE POINT 
You will be amazed et how this 

? row* on vou. The perfect 
retirement) ‘ 


___i too. New 
’•red e» $57,9( 
JACK PETRIE 
or 599-3321 (office) 


home (retirement) tor those who 
aporeciate the character and qua' 



)i?V 2 ri , TSfeo~ia' 


540 SNELLLVG 
OPEN SAT. 


Gnfuifc 


DOCTOR'S 

DELIGHT 


21 


479 9194 


U Uy. l* otters 2 vary tare# BR» with _ 

mi,!T T ’.17h;r l.*R« TWO ITOMY..OUAUIV 

masier ,* nomi .i sh/ HOVE, very fine condition EACH 

6x™sisfl3fessta 

now short .walk to schools and viilaoe 


r:.. J I i 

WESTERN HOMES 

leitOeverdale )t6S494 


t.s,s noma 

bat on ter you and your 
ith 4 bedrooms and den. 
acod high locH^JO jlvihft v 
retain in vestment. two hJft 

fS-iw 1 * 

Xj$A £m aW)* m. cSLT'" 

1 ° Wl1 KrffUtoSSLN «s»» *J “S? 1 * “SI™!, Come, a Foul Bov Rood .no 

716-7521 (24 hrs ) 59I073C iRes.USSK^iovely easy cero !Ses!! .® r . ,Qh !.®?- In Oak Bay. Jreed 

shrubs end lawns. Plenty of perk- 


Bob Harm _ _ 

iofnlnq reading room and itudv: Zovwtr' isiafxl' An Tn^macuiate 1 
v t>9 ,hro o m4 . Pu'*y ;st*o 3 bedroom nom4. Master c. 
equipped k.tchen 2 sundtckl. prt- i9 i>it#. kitenen w*th f*m r iy room 

_ , vet* teicony. secluded b*'k> oft. secarat# din nq area large a- 

Lovely L.R. with F.P ,,w OTTWS./vwve in inuT^,,,,..T spari ng clean 2-bdrm home with d ring r00 m. Exclusive. $143 000 F»che<j worxsnoo. CidS# to • 

separate D.R. Large oright kitchen hvina 1 No steos in ex,r * 2 down. Greoous 1 <9l r '9*na Residence Of4»«* > schodis. Immediate possessor 

.*Sn washer and dryer - «!» ^ 9°* ,!£gL wmi ePO^ '*"■ 3 ?°li Ted WeHord 477-1941 PltMt c4 .i JOYCE STVLEo 

-rri-r fis SKr:. '^SlK:TS?r^ srfei.'Tas bealttfu. 

ML.S h XMW..Cjn ri ,. .« “!(t?in?i^Tv. ”'3»l3 VALLEY \TEIVS 

3M«0. 0 , <17.34)5 |°X OPTOUmniF 7+4 DAFTODD. 

1 CAT >_4 , rtnm eta irtM* L/rtd> riLJCaCo situated on quiet street Da nor emit 

_ ■ r den^ fami*? SAT. 1:30-4:30 views over Coldultz Va'iev a 2 or 

j 5174 BtoCKTON - k&2F*5i SKtir ^Set A oood J bdrm family home In a 3■ 1 ^5* 

jWnat you nave been _walting tor $ 159,000 ouiet location^ Within easy wai kinq ' living room with tireplace. 


OAK BAY RANCHER 
OPEN HOUSE 2:30-5.00 
SAT. AND SUN. 


Seaview 


OAK RAY 
IMMEDIATE 
POSSESSION 
itifuity tari 


' lot with access on two streets. 


road appears smaliad mani* is^ 
//net a lovaiy noma and office it 
r .. 11 ■ * Aoutd make. 319 Milburn. MLS. 

executive Home 

Gordon He 6 d Sa^^St WM AMTACTir 

Or a quiat cm dtJWjC With sae^end »'rtetln Windsor FANTA5TIC 

ourtem views. This home offers *rea. T ^ou«h hall, b'9 )« ft. , 

f oadrooms. ensuite plumomg LR with FP. 11x9 DA. )ux7 Y^*,?,«££• 
v.m shower, eunken living room u 2 ® 0 ^ *'*• * nd P* 

len with flreoiece for cozy winter kitchen. Over 1100 
a/eplngs, a or Iveta,. tenc*d yard wnot with 3rd B 
•nd left of parking Less then on# 34790. 
ear old. Ask nq $49 500. ML 35015. 

-OANCOOY+T IMMACULATE HOME 

ONLY 149.900 


•- ^«RW'IBIH» Or park- C4<Jtf rancher with heavy 

ln R — l 4 - c *?^ .r 0 *^ U* shake roc 4 Three bedrooms two 


eath« -eatllator fireplace. Rac. 
Rn . and spacious kitchen. Large 
patio off living rm. Spic span and 


J6-749J '74 hrt.) MLS 35)71. 



W4*tin* tut _ 1159.0QU QUi?f RKEIMI wuftfii 9 «»r 1 ^**5 zr~ . Jt>_. 

... . BR», master: 'distance to Oak Bay rec centre, tat# dining 1 ^om^iarge 

ensuite. Large coay femilv room 5 . M e ar St. Michael s Senior Uni- shopping, t eetre. schools. Fu " y f#0 * M 

Plus den. Quarry file entrance, 2 ver „ fv school - cn cui-de-sec. 3 churches, etc. „ _ J at> ic 

f rac laces Random oak oeaoed M rms. post and beam living room. *4-2231 wyf Weaker >99-2952 ^99-1420 Ted Walford 47. 1 $4 

EE^^g l Sag- l g ,l ‘ - *“» “ (JHH7X HOUSE SAAMOm)X 

; 234Rll^^rS’s 47».»14 O. tSftJfWSn W25 wou-aston COTjrorHajK 

HAZEL CAMPBELL 394-9001 d0wni 3 bathrooms $125,000 cat 9-4. $47,900. Excellent value. 1902 VF7NROSS PL. 

spur LEVEto- $57,000 T* cLr. s •f&ffigSZS* 8« fflSi ' 

*-■ - SshnfcSttWt -iwn wniw -a aa , m ST 

vet* patio. Living room with tire- . R inc ner — Contrec- .... ifma 6 ^ veoeteoie garden. 3 bed 

place, large kitchen with loads of *■ ** n v ^b gen 3 bed 1>U STOCKTON rooms master specious w.t*- ? r . tr . lf s 

^ 7 ^ ; . ff’XT'iS" *“ ^?^S%SSi.)SS?«S “Sft.o5!5»i»»r 0 *''* ™jm ^4‘nS Jiy iSSasS^iiSSSt 

r ^a*gffiSffiS' 

gorge jasrvTWK* ssr si ...» ^ 

2 -btdroom home, large lot. 152.000. $9* *00. 

10. Near Meiestic Perk, family 
noma with 3 bedrooms up, 2 down 
l. Otters on $76,000. 


1512 M^OiAE 
OPEN HOUSE 


DA W io?7 V'ews ever in# sea and city from 
»* and big ,n « windows and^sondecks of tn.6 

$62 W 0 * mil bek^*tne*k>okou 1 at W»'Dr«n Perk SAT., SEPT. J—2-5 pj)i 

uohh flatt 94 DENISON RD. - SUN " SEPT 


University 


Nfcaiv 
with large 
noma has 


Tnis 

bungalow 

- 


$58,900 


5 ace 

off. I 


From Kindergarten ’0 College, ’ms 

P.M. 70UF family. There ere 5 bed 

inn*, mnrt Come and see it If vou ere seeking rooms. 2 full betn> and four entr- tDri 

r---." u T?ri de r h - r d ? 00 a home refreshingly different from ta nment-slzed rooms (e»cn with a MARIGOLD AREA 

aSSSti^r l il Wrth firT the normal 3-bdrm. home oftyed fireplace). The house is very wen cider noma, large lot. FP In 

??R win? larcesunda^t of* today's market. We'I priced eL maintained end me beck yard is; l.r . dining roomT full basement 

DR with taroe sundeck «,a S ,oco_ ML^3»03. Mr. .Grqene jn completely ^ftneed. ^.so^^^an | R^;' r |im^5 bedrooms. Call 


ESQLTMALT 

7 bedroom, full baesemen- near rec room, sauna, 

TER VEER 1). One of the best split level buys 

4^-1541 or 394 SCO) m Gordon " * ‘ - 


In Gori 


OPEN HOUSE 
SAT. 1:3Q-4:UU 
2S30 CAROL ANN 
OFF MT. VIEW 
OQLWOOD 


WANTED 

HANDYMAN - ,, ■ 


Located on 


Heed. Nicety treed 

corner w Come and exeer-enc* the 'pride 
deh. open family room ^ ownertfclp At jss.mo. vour 

I Uul. 


uief street 


. close to schools and snoos. Don't r.'.ii"~~.y~cr« aa. z. 'w. , 

1 delay cell for further information IUJf , 1 , ^ j a i 

.._, "UnTvefsifv"ar“ea not’ only MLS ^i-ciTu ersDRMAN 

’eelures 1300 sq. ft., but also has -j..™, * E,TM BO XsV5 7 A ^ r)IES 
•cached a email In-Law Suite to ** 
assist with the mortgeg# oev- trmv 

- ents. Lot has mature trees. New mlJ-JvIKis. 

on the market. Act Now. ML very presentable. Close to Gorge 
15191. Park. No-Step home. LR with 

— 477-5120 hardwood floors. Kitchen moderr 

Dinma. ? BRs. Separate garage 
$45,900. Owner will take smell 

motor home In trade as pert pev __ 

CALL: JOHN HOlMo at f.Cg™ 

316-7571 N|>WJiWchen to 

home 


attendance.~For a private viewing, move In VlBht ewev!' 


FRED LERCH 


Broadmead 


BETTER THAN 
NEW 

ANO IN 

ROCKLAND 

FAIRFIELD TOO 

$76,500 


view this most desir. 
VLS 34440. HEL 
346-3494 (24 hrs). 


■_-tv 1 Kpt room, 3 o*ur+»ui" 

PETER TER VEER 


bedrooms, 
off ktchen. c 
3-oiece ensuite. 
on $42,000. 

11 Contemporary yet elegant' 
ms and den all on one >- 


_T.L.C. <arge lot. Low taxes 

Close to ell facilities. $4i.«oo. 

Offers please. 

396-323) Chris Kruizinge 479-06*6 
Vvrna McGee 312-9329 


RES. 592-91 ix 


CENTRAL 

ma*ter with p pwnrww. w w» »»•«■ ’--— —- SAANIGH 

f„,, BN. ONr. 8 S&, liSSf Agio” 

F.P., dtnino, kitchen and utility ienoscaped and fenced — h*»J*>; 
room. Lot nicely lendsceoed On v ron There are 3 Bdrms. on mu 
$44,500. _ 


m«nt. 


Tr# only traditional 2 sfor^y Dutch 


♦or#y Dv 
with 4 I 


WTELTRAL'E 

DA VIDA — - Efull bati 

Perfect Compact. Clean. ? BR. 3 Vp»MmS 

* ' p. Electric heat. Good-sized A Jn.r.tt SPAi 

hul 1 _trsee .11 Dog run. MLS room. Qua'lty ceroets over HW t iVomeT We 
$42J)00. Will trade tor 3 BR Moors Full BRIGHT basement personnel cioce 
ent country home on eOout X 4th bedrm.. rec. rm. end c“ 

more spar- * — 1 ' 

Rri 


Must Sell This Week 

Vendors Moving iPertect. Corroect. Clean. ? BR. 0 » CL ,B._ 

r» . _| 3 No-step. Electric heat. Good-uzod A se o a rate SPXClOU: 

Reduced L°A-Trult_tre#». Dog run. _MLS room Guam 

$116,000 


479-1599 or jlelOOi bedrooms end den aM on one 'aval 
plus ilfBe dining room. Kitchen. 

SXS DUPLEX $69,500 *«"■ •«* '• undrv - ,12f S0 ° 

IT S YOU Excellent Investment. Low down j 13 GrMt for kldsl Basic bungefe* 

CHOICE could handle. 2 bedrooms each wit* 5 oedrooms, 2 baths. Nice 

* . _ tide. See views. Call Gordon Head tot with badminton 

t:: s&rsjrsr^vTS saw TE " VEE0 w 

large (over 300 sq. ft.) master 

bedroom upstairs for e studio or I Axrr , ryr 

family room or whatever. You^Jl' ROOu-AND AVE. LAJ r 

*55 ONLY ONE!! / _ Owner has bought —~most'anxious gijii w f iiedronnri home with’loik o' 

•^•oyrvrjss. r&. , **0. ariB^ss® sj^’Lrsr.’sr^ Im - * *°- m ( * 

-.ICY 


PRICED FOP- 
QUICK SAL1- 


lutery FABULOUS 

•« the large (60xlB)) under vo.uw. WC 5 JC»J. i 'ook , c*vo mm •>■»» •y 

lOED arounds. this fine tor •.sro to seeing you 'ner#! ft. located behind e rocto-await on a o^en plan 

wfil pi ease the bwer Who HEJLEN JONES. 396-3494 !2J hrs). 1 pr ' J - ' 


Neat end t.dr 3 

_ ______ ... __mes Bey. LR.AiRB - 

i authentic tudor finish- kitchen all still retaining original -Trenquil waterfront property li 
ere tot $129,900 character, new root Sept. 77. *g Dr oximetelv t, acre. ComtoM 


— 2 bathrooms. High daylight 
basement partially deveiooed and 
New $47,900 2 bdrm. bungeiow. rougned In for 3rd bathroom. Ver- 

electric heet. thermal windows dor transferred. .Quick « 06 aesS' 0 n 
utility room, new earth F.P. Good'IOper caM mortage eve'leb'e 
ai.eiitv carpets end cupboards. Offers on M0.900. M.L 33718 
4^5337 T, d Rmil» iS4 554- ^JNANK UtE <(f|| 

LV.NCtFORD IAKF bu'sI^J^Ves. 


33207. 
basemi 

'CALL: JOHN HOLMS St 396-7521 


prefers a modern home in a me---„ 

W * *'1*F ULLBATHROOW+ 5 BEDROOMS 

3 BEDROO-Vi ON MA'* 

sized homeT WeBtoutted to nevai 


,0 °k i open'pien'plus <ien end family mediate Possession. ML 5’54 1W 

Priced fo" room In Broadmead. $157,500 . 477-2149 Al Bull 477-194 ) 479-5561 NANcV 


THROW AWAY 
YOUR WISHBONE 


private cuf-de-sec. Priced for fco»" m oroeomeso. so/.wu. 477-ziee ai pud ar/ iwu 479-5561 NANCY YOUNG *714)054 

K?(nW?wooo*AJO X^SSt ySZSZ TS2&m JAMES BAY ITS HOME 

$28.0UO 394-4001 or 477-2752 d J* {{? room^Mkint 9139.000. CH.VRACTEK HOME Cosy ? BR mobiiewitn •* tr « '!• | 

r a "»'?a& nx^srAtsut t*ssi!s cusro ?* bEsi ? N ....... ,vs tF ^tt Atv ts&Sb s£,£t%l&ietZko r “ t- ^**“” 


4BB- mumxcKmcaatr 

room off kitchen. Oouofe enclosed : DON T WORRY — BUY‘_— 
toe. Sunny large 'endsceped avtu-yvav 

. BMutifuily decorated home A ANYWAY 

” st sue. Beto-w replacement 3244 Aider St. 3 BRs. full base 
v*tu#. View Immediately with. ment. Large lot. Opiion to pur-, 
LIMAN MCLEOD 654-4441 cnese. $41,900. MLS 34943. 

IS "MrWW 59^5131 i CALL: JOHN HOLMS at 396-7521 


lovely qerden. 


►r I vete sundeck ever to 


Krai 

lURST 394-901 


qereoe. 

ot BBBU 

”- ,f A.. 

..I MoLEOD 

CANADA TRUST 

. Sidney 

$68,900 
Immediate 
Possession 
Large 10 Q o 
Mortgage 

one block to the see on qu'«’ cut; 
de-sec. Won-built 3 bedr.oom*. 2 
oetnrooms on mein well devel¬ 
oped lower level Large tut 
fe 'cad lot. Excellent value. MLS. 
LILIAN MCLEOO 

c/nada trust 


ENJOY QUIET 
AND PRIVACY 
IN TOWN 

At in* end of a cui-de-sec near. 
Bev St. you ere close m vet away I 
from th* »ounds of traffic. A gen ' 
erous planting of trees end shruoe 
neke' this cacxverd private and 
peastnq. Morning sun enters new 
Kitchen, a large living f-oom face* 
th# sunset Other main features 
are low maintenance, 2-3 bed 
rooms, and a reasonable price of 

595-1535 

Tu*y GARDNER S PARADISE 



to” snoooTfto!'and immediate possession. 1245 sq. " APR 
.. WWI , you attor^NOT to! of living tree. 2 bedrooms, herd- PLEL 

' zg l t?t sss tjar jsssltV'* ^ „ , f -r, 

3 ^u. ‘„ MELfN J0N6i ^ £uLr-T: JUST LISTED 

LARGE F.VMILY T m * MARGAR 1 M j 7 ohnston 

• 13 800 477-1743 


394-1001 or res. 459-9990. 


EXCLUSIVE 

$179,000 


ti | f \A/ *“ 99 ’tn r * r •< »■' BB hiimiu" • • 

X 1 IJT pantry. Upper can ce oevetooed 
Nicely landscaped. Great posslblll 


_ and cozy 

. enced back yard, close to school. 
471-6454 i S’SKiping end bus. MLS 33653. On v 


, tits. ACT NOW, this one wHI not 
477-2149 Al Bull 

TOUR STAR SPECIAL 
HIGH DONCASTER 


$49 580 °* 

345*f>” »US CK °* A RES. 4H-417. 

„ , Located 2 blocks from ell needs 

477-1941 C f shopping end recreation. 2 bed 
room with spacious cioeets. Re^o 

vated kitchen — seperet# dining Br j gn y sunny home with high loca 
area. FP in LR. Bsmt. for sfor- T , on s | V mg privet# freed bac» 
$49,900 Phon* me tor vee urM ato apehen ha* iw 


IMMACULATE 



BLOCK FROM BEACH 


I HAWKIN' 




l9o»"io lAoeoiy MOM. M. on 5 Cavtnw\ Irum nil rooms. J'iMVt'stwMt room. dW cyroofl. 

■ ■»>«» **■* ffiEffoSSSP JSi1Rt« 4 '»droon». •» 4 pi«w 

,_ ,Sh’oi“”oS: 4 ' 7 ™ ^ ensuite. 3 LR or Jamily jentw.jwn, tor wa. a* 

& W8-S * fe §BU fe fe^X.oxLY w.m 

1557 McKenzie decor of tne family rm end rec. Terrific 3 bedroom family home kitchen, workshop. . 

Central 5aamch rm. You can't deny yourself a spacious and roomy uooited ’e u ( , uater heat docble car- 4 BEDROOM CJtARMER 

^ home in th# most desireabe part wirtog. insulated. 3 year old roof. u uu v atlordabie at $49 >oo and a 

Of town Just JV»,90u MLS 350*5. ccoper iXumblno. Full beiement pon. ample parking, beau- ^#2". cere non besewent home 
C^l^ JACK OAV'S 3M-3494 (24 ^® r mor# |tiluJly landscaped' ^nsumili With a detached garage with rear 

-- *JOHNSTON 

r 344-90UI [ 


$69,900 

3-4 BEDROOMS 
36 ACRt 


CORDOV A BAY 
$75,900 


477-1763 


You Shouldn't miss tn.s quaMr . llB ,- B „ 

built home With lovely veiiev and » SU L ^ E ? f ^ * 

mountain views. Gleaming nerd- 

■ i nstrt. Din* wail *0 wa m Rambler. Add to this tne >w n. . , 

floors plus wen to_ we n 1#| Banr ^ ^ „ bsi ) and ^*’ t Ki - -„ 11D 

mdeck. . Must oe seen. b ^2 W Il < ^ cl 


ACHARY 592-2265 


_ . . fence to Simpson *••»•». Fin.nu on mem. floor to save 1 i 

Open House mm 

‘ ‘ W mmm ' 


__ _ garage .— 

street access. A sparkling wnite 
■■■■nan bbW« imam. L-reem 
.!replace 2 bathrooms, Israel 
brioht famity kitchen located on a. Do you despise yard work but 
* - street near schools, >*>4t‘009 accommodation and 

ppinoCaii parking for 2 vehiciesTif th.s Is 

Ai Lee' 1 477 114 ) ?r * case • have th* answer 3 BRs. 

* 1 . r jfhr.v' rs edtr* larna I D 


Decaptlve in size from outside. 
Thl* It a epadoue 4toedroom nome. 
Large living room with F.P Sep¬ 
arate dining room. Fuff basemen’ 

Foreclosure 


on mein floor to save steps. P 
full neiant deylkitn bueement; hrs.). 
reedv tor development. Mony oe- 
sireebi# extra features. Exciusiv# 

‘DAVID SOUTHALL 

477-7294 (24 hr*.) 6S2-1»1 (R#».) 


tilully landsca[*d ’ gnHimik 
of over 1 acre plus 173 ufj*,tth green 
the choicest waterfront tn itgtJ f ! m T r _ 

R tot 55* k 244 with GARDENEk’S DELIGHT Victoria. Home is modem quiet no-thru street near" school*! * 

•«>! $47,900 B.C. contemporar>’ with ^.12} J ^ 

""IL of ma ”"* 1 ' ' \njST SELL' fe 15 . 

to vtaTiyiS pl*$« to to* living room large used. A true executive MUST SELL. casement has 

%oliS- 0J% .’Tl*.'.’ tlroam hum., which should COUVOOD - 

ii 10,650 to. tf) duplex toned »ot. **11 this weekend. Priced j JlJJ 1 

C# RAYTiLLYER neht at $179,000. IM«. C 

j 394-5464 pager 730 or 477-0191 

TOWN AND COUN TRY 



IMMACULATE 

STARTER 

The'# s a qu'tt country etmg 
sohere tnat it most appealing. Two 
bedrooms, living room dirlinq 
room, cozy kitchen, fenced yard 
fruit trees, full basement uodated 
serveet, or a quiet deed end 
street. Only $46,450. ML 30)77 
JACK GRANT 

3*2-9191 BUS. RES 47/«K2 

THE PERMANENT 


Near The Sea 


OPEN HOUSE 

'1531 K'ENMORE 


to. New. ... 

RIS GUDJONSBON 

SEARS $44,950 


SAT 1:30-4 P.M ... . .. 

Com# see tnts unique 3 or 4-bed Jus ’ " 4,<d 
iroony home In toe Mt. Doug area _ _ , , , A . x . 

• BOO $a. ft. on th# mein floor and CCfll 1 I KA A 1 

“ basement provides tots L U I /VIAL I 


Must 0 * sold, this 3-bedroom no 
uasemeni home in tn# Langford 
are* Very Clean, reedy to move 

f>r - ed *' iJ, 73 ?. 357 i df tlvrng’ibece. Large'lot and dou¬ 
ble-car garage. Property include; 
separate revenue cottage to reduce 
your mortgage payments This 
' nome really must be stem drive 
1 0F*tv whit* Stucco 2 bedroom bV won't do. MELINDA HEL 
-ome with *x%a plus playroom in LYE 
fu i basement. Cl— - '*- 


LAKEHILIa 
CHARMER 
$03,900 

fe rfe l i,’SLw X 3KB5i 'ITs’l 2 BEDRMS - itl.9^1 

tne INTERIOR where you live end This retirement or Verier bung*- 
BOV will you be oroud to own this low Is a steel on today s market. 

home. Beautifully APPi- 1 “ . - 

thru out and so CLEAN, 
include B.l. Nook, — 

Garb. In the Family _ . HRMMM 

Immaculate 2 bedroom no b$mt v bedrm . 4 pc end 3 pc. Bath. Sep. call now. MLS 33541. 

Walk to OH the shoos. Bright spa DR. Astro Turf on the Sundn k 477-0191 JACkMOEN 
ctous Kitchen. Warm comfortable MLS 3M06 FOR PRIVATE view- 
LR. Sepero^e workshop wfto inq. Ph« 
laundry facilities Easv car* yard. (24 hr«) 

■ - i. m.l5 


SIDNEY 

$37,500 


$34,900 


vcneols. 


tmant. Close to SimeiORi 
edloin ing playground. Suit 
‘■rad*. Ask t£out th# 


I or 479-1377. 


raUMwfflf* 


GORDON HEAD • $79,000 
Just Uetedl A very tovefv 3 bed¬ 
room home close to uviC, #n 
ools and Recquet Club. Attrec- 
rtve features in mis quality 1 veer 
old home include 3 patios. 2 brick 
firepiece*, 2 bathrooms ptoe 


roughed In 
Finished Rec. 
Laundry room. 


Ma quality 
3 patios, 
bathroom: 
ament be 
reyn. TV x lj 


Laundry room. To see 
Herb Hodgson 392)135. 
aa Sr. 47E6099, Dough 
Ltd. 394-7129. 


cell 


OPEN THURS 
& FRI. 

7-9 P.M. 

SAT. & SUN/ 

3018 PICKFORD 

tod, 

A 


_ bedroom, no J»mi hom*. 

Root end exterior stiAcg are 2 yrs 
old Lot is 49.5x129.5 M. LR has 
f replace. Greenhouse end storage 
shed In backyard. M.L $. 

SCOTT KE'NDREW 
477-7284 



OPEN HOUSE 

pg own this low is a steal oh today's market. A B . . « , _ 

•POINTED Living room with fireplace, i#rq# ^ r |\ k i | k | 

timTfs&mml-i P.M. 5AI. 

OPEN HOUSE 
2-5 P.M. SUN. 


shake 4 79-7161 MARION PELL 344-785* 


I— I ■■ ■ ■ „ _ r —Iff iIfi JlctiB 

. 35)06 FOR PRIVATt view- 
Phon# TERRY EDEN 3i6.3494 | L ' ST LJSTi:i> 


will look at all reasonable 
offer;. This home features two 
fireojaces. hug# carpeied kitchen 
dininq room, a total of five 
bedrooms, rec room games room. 

I > baths. Drlve-m g 

roof end much more. . «.... _ _ . . _ _ 

ajrjftgei i**" Hi »"•’ OPEN HOUSE 

477-4209 Fred D efmen 477 1141 2 30 - 4 30 

HIGH GORDON HEAD 3Q01 AUSTIN AVE 

tSSS^ Ou'V Gorge area, attractive 3 BR 
cnnt^mfwSrV STdln i fcungetow. 1025 SO. tt Oh main 

din^BMmidTvtol. flo0f i l<r *« l*t. plenty of blecktuo 

gassC’SUK * r ” ,c ’ 

- »«""y 

transferred 

477-5705 ErnaEMsay 477 1841 


tn rooms, store — 

DR etc. f.H.C. 

_3 rooms perliilly 

shed. 

OP0NTOVIEW - 

SAT. 2 4:30 OPEN HOUSE 
2748 COOK ST, 

$56,500 


855 FORT ST. 


384-9335 


GORDON HEAD 
$73,900 

3 bedroom, 2 year old temi'v nom# 

In quiet cul-dt-sec Buttt-in dfsn- 
wether. 3 oca. en-sulte. oatio doors 
off kMt-i-n and dining room. Elec 
trk heat Fenced and landscaoed . . ■ , ,_,, utll . n EXCLUSIVE ARLMORL 

tot. New MLS. CaH. >or. lurthor iniurmauon , atrt sfavtkwk 

GALE CHRISTENSON n | rtlt n ... j u Younu 4 AL-Kt o£AY IL<>\ h 

477-0191 477 7047 P 1 ® 8 ** can J n ‘ * ou,, *4 A > v e#r-old country home, peace. 

588-1818 or Mike Ruddy fr««h afr. sunerlne. garden end 

cuuninu. _ 65 M.B 8 m^To ,«ger | ggSgS^ «£? ? 

IM. .-jrofiey c Sf *! ¥ d_L,« if j| 80 . 


Res 479-3224 


J97S OLYMPIC VIEW DRIVE 
SUNDAY 1-30-4 00 

Have dinner on the oe - 
Enloy th# quiet country atmo 
sphere end lovely see views or 
walk to the beech — ail Is pos 
sibto from this spacious ‘amity 
home. Entertainment size ly¬ 
ing end dining areas, ftreplece 
eating areo in kitchen, tut' 
Lasement pertty devetopeo 
Aakmg $79,000. A must see - 
take Metchosln Rd. to Du*e 
• Rd and follow signs to Oly v 

399-7557 Marilyn Moor* 3I24C: 
3 w-7S»7 Jo Lennox 478-?$t 
CAPITAL CITY REALTY 
LTD 


, _a'privet*v compiled I . 

!61 propertkig being offered tor sal. 

I in th# Cedar Hill erg*. I have 
scanned on# hundred end slave, 
streets in order to save you time 
end money in your search for « 

‘^Isw^aTir.TOris. 2 

tuft eny serious buvfr. 
help, ceil me today 
*“ “K BLA< 


over 

l# L s* n M#wSee I 2-bedroom bungalow on ap- 

1 orox. '4 acre, comoieto with oetlo. 

--large trees, powered workshop end 

AND UNIQUE LOG HOME seperet* gereg*. Nestled quietly 
Featuring behind It* own high hedge, thl* 

q. tt. o* llvTng space nom* In Its totally private y#rd Is 


COZY 
-1440 *,. 

- 2 odrmt. plus den 

Living rm. with t.p. 

-.Separate dininq rm. 

K'fcnen with solid oax cabinet* 7 YEAR 

-Rec. rm. wita car Brentwood 

-w^W throwgflftut bam*, i* 

Tff#r*d ov owners at U3 500 varq draoes 

•Ji-uWe A'eexmghts attar 5 ; ,2-478* 


home In Its totally private yard is 

L2T^«j[.' rL NES,l7r 


OLD V* OUPLEX IN 
lev. 3 bedrooms 
ndKeoed with fenced 
oes nctuded $44,594 


WHY PAY COMMISSION 
You win tell m tov# wftti th# 2300 
square feet of luxury living on 8 
floors offered by thl* o*mer 6 a- 
t^ned end bum horn*. Peetufe* 


on# dewr. Burnt 
a«ii* In living roo 

end maitor b»Breei-. - 

ing, uni sue fireplaces, ooth enter- 


Vaulted ceil- 


dininq arte Vendors to| 4? ,. 7U1 

OPEN HOUSE BY OWNER 

SAT & SUN 1-3 PM 
7193 HAGAN RD. ; 

Brentwood Bay 

%r" v’l #w-l ngp riione’477-4736.’ 


home. grenS' rnelSto 0 ^to^^ *«»uced - B ^2roc^ rC n M en*uite) K 
ensuTte end dressing room Living vr. old 3 bedroom (1 ensuite) no 


Let me - 


ACKHAM 


LANGFORD 
7vcYvbednom. no-^tep 
gakTw tor the first home 

buyer or for your retire -1 ~ "mark _ __ 

ment. Low Uxex Extra 477-0191 1 BeeutlfS* 

l»r*e. nicely treed lot Oxrn-, BEST OF BRENTWOOD SSLS? '£ 
SSTiSSJfe, fy UvrngIt. bMt 2s5. K M: <lr W,2 rt ’.- r S"' l fe -SSL L’, r ,r"^**a, 

M 2 .J 00 ?£, «S' wgj, tg lA'n -jww 

JOHN TODD HUGO M«««" "air,.“j 

dtvid bun- Kd. S SSJU5. 'hS25mf , £fflK 


PARK PACHTG 
L\ VESTMENTS 

383-4124 


BY OWNER 

DOVA BAY RD. 


room lovely end bio seoarate 
across hall formal dining room. 
Step-down femilv room, maealve , rM 
crick fireplace with custom copper .JCM, 
nood. Start your day cheerfully ini 47 ** 71 
i the begutlfui - 


• 2 yr. old 3 bedroom (l ensuite) p 
beauty. 1200 sq. tt, on main and ~ 
full high bsmt. weter view end. 


te&'feJKItfeSSni ^r« L feVS,.a S R 


jar Pun filled game* room, built- 
in vacuum evstem. Destonar iignf 
ing end door fixture# throughout 
you'll bo delightod et the price, 


•no amazed at whet mis house, 
can offer you. Please celt 471-2514. >4-9..Jo 


598-7848 J 


HOUSE SUNDAY AND ■ 
12-5. 519 Brough, behind Bv 


$39 900 


down. 


tsirtr®«:r. 

. . .xtra flue for firaonce 
under*round Hydro, phone.l 



^2S5 t rr»£5«si oak bay border 

~ at *61,900. Phone anytime: By owner immaculate 3-6R cun- 

161 Gladys Tnomas 3964502 geiow. quiet *r*e, n#ndy schools 

- end smell, lovely kitchen, dinln* 

room, fireplace, beautifully land¬ 
scaped. $59,700. Phone 592-6950. 


GORDO* n-AD $52,500 


Monday W iV-5*^i* ^Brough,' behind g y <wr, T^ bedroom home.'c’aWtofwtoR. 'curberefc.’ 

Cotwood School Now Quality bultt _ \jm\m ucoit ^ ttit window, call ma anytfrna | —— . . ■ - ■ ■ 

location i d #<3 t^awayr yJ/ai a jtS-SMf;_ihowmo. no oWiaati^ tor i Hva! lANDVAWK PHOFSHTHtS ltd 

°i’» oetn* 7°’Tepieces PLOATINO FOR aether* “_ _ ** pifsTl^ifc* 


; beck yard full of ■ 

1 cedars. 2 bedrooms, wmv ceroets. 
handv laundry area off kitchen, 
i Lovely covered petto. Attached 
carport, storage-work room. Price 
" ^ UJ w Lot i|/t 


GOftOON 


QUADRA-TATTER iAU. 

_ ARE-\ 

bethrooms: ci*#n 2-bedroom home, full bat. 

■j^JSSigC WM Al ‘ ,Ha _ 

view: rMMCOIATV ROSSESSION 7 
bedroom, laundrv room, welt in 
-ee. newiv fenced, 57x133 


cvpr iiTivr w®n, hwwiy itnu«u, j/hm 

E /?4 j i»rM lot - Ihnmmeculat# throughout. Musi 
fe I «>• to*n. 39.900 . 479-57%. 


7?xriP: 


479-2944 


«*• ed under Boais and 


JCMU * 


Dave vooeigeMna 


MEAD. 

tvo* nom*. 1’j ye_. _ 
bedroo'-nt. iMCiOU# kitchen, 
room, dlntog room lovely r#c 

room, large Simas room or 4t9»____ 

bedroom. Shake roof double wen meintelnad, 


477-01*1 RON SEcGtR 479-36 j3 


DAK BAY 

Erevan snoeomfl, uplanda Par. 

_ .... _..well maintain^, modern ? oeo 

394-5464 oerane double oiumbrna and room wim tun basemen* Ree 
Rager No 7*0 manv extra: $7*.500 4/7-0695 ane >9h *7»* 






__ $y .e 


;^v^; 


r 

















































































j ,Wll.\ COUOMM N h'Um-mi, B-C N»lutxifi> >fylpltt'»r» ^ 19»* 

*M* HIM *K* HMI HAI.C I14* IIOI *».* h)K HAI.K Mi IBM MW *A».U 


j v ..^gl( 

fW. J, >jxmI 


OPEN HOUSE 

3914 LEXINGTON 
SAT.-SUN. 

I 30-4 P.M. 




SERSPRRV 

roOKRTICS LTD / KMTOM 

pm3&r stiiii 1 

1 OPEN HOUSE SID AND GRAY'S 

1 BETTER HOME 

SELECTION 


1M HOI *►.» Tim fcU.f. 

ARCHITECTONICS I 
"At Its Best" 

This 2 -b*droom and targe study 
family room . provides distinctive 

through tirgplec* dlvtilnu living 
and tlininu ooom*. stone fireplace. 
in Hying and study — fBmUv cus 
tom Ig**. clhJngts with Indlret t 
lighting. skylit soaking tub In c« 
ramie title mam bathroom, thy lit 
- with 2 -piece an 




5 .*. IIOI FOR SALE !.W IIOl&EK FOR SALK !.W HOt*E » tXMt SALE 

TOWN 
AND 

COUNTRY 
REALTY 


,__ — Tywtt m. c total. An am 

eland in' distinctly* cad*r siding 


864 Colville 


•nc In a fully screen ian< 
privato yard. Asking 495.000 


and* ai id 


$39,900 SAT. 1 - 4 

eSTShlm m? Hm I V? old 3 Ga% inside this t t 2 no ^i“i!L 
odrm. soi't. hum !!**«« room with baautv. Large kitchan, J^badrms 
frapiaca. L ahapad dlnlno room. 3 full basement and zoned R.S A 
rdrm master anauita and wetk-ln PERFECT STARTED WITH FU 
ioaat. Nicely landscaped. un- TURE POTENTIAL. ML 34778. 
icrground wir.no, doubt* car port. I 386-3124 DOUG POSKITT 477-0645 
Oo<*to achocw tranapgr- _ 

latton MLS 3493* 4*2 500 MARGi 
EMMtRSON 6514386 or 316 - 6164 . , 

OPEN HOUSE 1 


MOUNT TOLMIt 
Great 'flaws, ,Gr*4t House. 


FRI. & SAT. 
1:30-4.00 P.M. 


Or at your con van. ant a Stalely 2 
radroom noma on main plus l bed¬ 
room suite up. till CAA 
?59.900 or otters FLO 
.46-6164 or 384-5024 


tain plu 
C AMO! 

: LO PI 

$44,000, GORGE 


*S35li!2^ , y 


OPEN SUN. 2-4 
FAIRFIELD 
4 BEDROOMS 
$72,500 

1661 EARLE ST. 

surprise! l . 

ary w 
OQMS. 
iATH I 


3 bedrooms and full basamant with 
access off a private lane. Fealur 
-i rng a 'arpa kltclton with eat I no 
-—-I nook, cadar f*Ud firaolaca and 

bdrms, panelled dam larg* livinj) cU$ t om teat cabinets for luxury 
room, lust renovated throughout, n v Tn«. The large master bedroom 
2 baths — $82,500. has a built-in wt, three-pioc* an 

Suita and skylit welkin drtssinp 
WATERFRONT ' area The 2nd bedroom up has a 

160 feet In Oak Bay 1450 so. H targe view deck over look ing the 
on main. M* dsml, 3 bdrms, 2 Olympics and the harbour Fmia 
baths. ML*. $158,000 fenced landscaped yard proYTBas 

»EN,NSUL« *»NCME« _ A ~'"’ " JC “ 

Would yoo belev* ®*JT***HL- T hia 2 bedroom skylit basamenf 
ft. (1600 on main), 5 acres, smel (Kjm€ has a double underground 
bam. 5 baths. 7 bedrooms, lust 1 enclosed garage Featuring a skvlit 


New For Fall 

Printed Pattern 


irraoiacaable now af 


FAIRFIELD 


... . -rough a three level 

mezzanine in the Central part 
of the house vaulted living r 

.lit soaking 


! ■ on hgH level, skylit soaking lut> 

-Hill Park, new in main batnroooa of cedar and! 

kitchen includes dishwasher sap- »*ak. accentuated by a blue car -1 
arata dining, 2 bdrms, basemenl, | mm \ c rHe floor and separata show- * 
ail upgraded. $59 900 Asking $85,000. 


OPEN HOUSE 


maintained i 3CD- 
ROQMS. NO BASEMENT TWO 

BATH bungalow on a large lot 
. „ . Near Hollywood Pork piay- 

* - 3 appliances^- Qroun d and tennis . . . a block to university SCHOOL 

fireplace and quiet Gorge area , Bay Featuring a central] Top value in a good area 2 1248-50-5? WOODWAY 

This great starter home hj» * I vacuum system, very private bdrms full basement with rec, AAON 1-5 pm i 

*Vl^d! p ? t, °' ,#n, i lv room v 2 ,,r V room. Nice garden. Only $56,500 . SAT.-SUN. MON 1-5 o.m 

*dh sliding glass doors fo fenced B i a ct» and much more. For prt-> for PRIVAtE VIEWING CALL 

ear yard and patio area Grai»ttr v ,| e w i #w in 9 «t all times, call TREED HALF ACRE n Vlll , 

nanclng on this wdh 1 ^ down 5554785, Eniov yoursaM. The complete MOOre & Campbell 

oe^nt D°^ RDWELL M6-4164 DOUG COOOINOTON house, 3 baths. Intercom, large ^ . D 7 j_ 


5 peer 171. 

MAYfAIR 
3 BEDROOMS , 
$51,900 

3 bedroom full basamant home on I 
aoiat street close In for only] 
$51,800 Great all new kitchan for 
nom too DOUG POWELL 386-6164 
or 582-6417 or 188-6275 pger 878. 

ROCKLAND EXEC. 
$149,900 

This 3-veer-old home has over 3400 
sq. It. of uniquely decorated living 
space, professionally landscaped 
*0 x1 iO- lot. Entertainment areas 
of the home provide an etmo 
'Share to enhance any special oc¬ 
casion. Big LR. separata formal 
DR. kitchen with adjoining so- 
arium and brick bulll-tn Bar-B-Q 
net water heat. Built-in vacuum 


! 585-3151 595-0785 

595-1151 LESLEE FARRELL 
388-5464 Pgr. 665. 592-7244 

ATTENTION 
STUDENTS 
CADBORO BAY 
$49,900 

OPEN SAT., 1:30-4 30 

2564 PFNRHYN AVE - t 

2 bdrms. — 830 sq. « Excellent 
holdinq property or great starter | 
in heart of Cad boro Bay Village.' 
Now reduced as vendor has a new 
home in mind, double garage 
wired and ready tor workshop 
mechanic, pottery. whatever I i 

Coma Sat. or call to view. 

LESLEE FARRELL 582-7244 

288-5464 Pgr. 665 
D. CODDINGTON 


nouse, J pains, iniercom, large r» i i 

sundeck Top location in North Designer - BuiIder 
Saanich. $108,500 ^ . . 

DUPLEX * CO. Ltd. 

StfVSS' , J84-2131 

3538^ IRREPLAOABLE 

Please phone for viewing any of AT $82,900 — Near Ctolwoodi 


the above. 

GRAY LAITE 656-5267. 
SID HASLAM 477 199j 
N ational Trust 585-2121 


GORDON 

HEAD 


Lake Estate*, with 4 
llxirms.. 3-4 pc. baths, quali¬ 
ty carpet thru out, white* 
stone FP, Dutch oven style 
j fireplace in rec. -rm. ' Has*^ 
j?aines rm.. wet bar, vaulted 
ceilings, vacuum 

$53,900 & UP iXSt,r v " k ' 

.... ... BobHahn 595-164; 

/md sprinkler system. Many other ,_ x . 1 "l* r ** t r * tw w* low. Vendor wW-, BUI Wonnacott 6S6-5373 

vatures make this an extraordi < sl)MNY ^ DN^FY ^ carry a mortgage with] i 

rarv buy. For viewing call SHANE JAJ'IN'IN T jUL-r i payments to suit your budget. Call Block Bros. Rpaltj Ltd 
aEFURT. 386-6164 or 479-0010. $58,000 buy* this 3 bedrm home and ask about our financing. Buy 

FAMTA^Tir VIFW L wlth .. r9C . ro °™ - J*** roo 5 ?direct builder to purchaser no 
'Alt I iwl IV— VICW fourth bedrm dowm DON T commissions to pay. 
f rom this 15 year old post and DELAY CALL TODAY 

S!S 000(1 P05K,rT ‘"^'CUSTOM BUILDING 

BRHNTWOOD BAY sBawsaBa 

:!■ iSSrtf ?'■w- 29 i 

mT5 A», ,”S ^'•wv'.’Te' ■* 0?s 

BEN GREIG 598-3105 y TP or c ^l n \ E 
IX \A/ITU 


REDUCED 
$38,500 
OPEN SAT. 





ISO Hot SE* FOR SALE 

□ 

WESTMONT 

REAIJY "SC 38S-4434 


$54,900 
OPEN SAT 2-4 
1509 OAKLAND 


, _ rm and on approx, one-third acre 1 

a* «u*a to U. This exciting new 1 beautifully freed lot in a lovely 
listing, completely renovated right i location jn Central ,^LS. 

down to the new kitchan wabinatS: _ „,„** Al - LY miCHAfeLS^^^ 
and featuring 2 bads up. 2 down, 477_0141 
IVs baths, sotral staircase and 
arga Rac Room Eniov the 24 ft. $56 900 

poo! surrounded by pool decking . 

and includmq new vinyl liner. GORGE AREA 

All this and much more conva .. 

nientiy located on a good street I Just "stad total 15C2 »R . ft, livl>» 
close to Sears with possession t room. 5 bedrooms 2 bathrooms. 


3-( ev^l SPLIT 
$67,500 > 

n prime Gordon Head 

_ 7 vaar-otd 3 barlroom 

home. Living foom with fireplace 
Dining rm with sliding glass doer „ 

»o sundeck, brlqht kitchen with i 
eating area, tVk bbths^TV room or 

’many) ned "'QwTWv. 'cowinictgd 

FP iri' f^urad XXS* SSi I --SSiT; ^ | 

Zltl^anEmi yS. JasShff *** Hy'dS SJP ‘ 

rm and on approx, one-third acra'b^' 382-7276 or 658-5877 ires) 'COME TO LONSDALK 


164/ SHELGvfURNE 

$73,000 

OPEN BEAMS .... 

vaulted reiiinoe and a magniticanf easy care level lot with many 

.X^Sd. c *J!£TwS■£*«oScL v» r iJSX.V 'i ‘SSf. ks: 


IMMKDIATE POSSESSION 
, YOUR CHOICE OF 4 
HOMES 

PRICED FROM 
$67,800 to $74,500 

All individually custom-oe^ig 


to 


SPECIAL VALUE | 


. log room with fireplace, 
kitchan with ampla eating area 
and ranee. Quadra Street. MLS. 
$52 900. C.T. and terms A. Kten 
man, 382 7274 or 592-9771. IVME 
DlATZ POSSESSION 


l> 


$42,500 


> avahabl* ^mmedlaleiy ’’compline inewly Insulated. Immaculate, close 

with.iarga ass^^to.g. at. i7M545 3 , ]? J1LLICUM RD. 

Nfaf end Tidy 7 bedroom norre. 


! an atiPac^va i 


TRUE 

TOWNHOUSE 


fVSK.MT ftACTIVNMC Neat and • »OV 7 woroom norre, 

DDN T POSTPONE oh heal, basement, on 30x133 tot. 

, . a rvr^i.A ifvr Clear Title. Good future fere with 

HAPPINESS future development a? outdoor TH 

,, . -iLCLT.l ~ U ^4" A. Ktenman for appointment 

I if a nice home m the country is > car .0171 

i what you've alwayd wanted, let 1 w ___ 

me_ 5 how you tnis bvely 3 ^r. old. 


- BR, 2 1 /* bath home' with 5.56 . w __ 

^T'f^ X2 lour bedmn- hc.T.i. 

0 *- f - V ^°» rr^-ulat* and tastefully decorated. 

OPFN SAT 2-4 gpSj£A$SMl S MSU*S. r X. W SS! j 
No I, 1464 FORTSTlwcK fok 'ou.ck s*le: S2j ,h ^, < “ e T^i5? w b^ * 

Located in the heart of Victoria i $m ' 900 A , ANDP rsom s75 0 5S c#u A,lan 

• s£ '.vrro'S’XS".:-” 4 '" J - w5 ^' 

ft: IMS* ’SJTu.^: BRAND NEW *2 FOR 1 

room. In superb condition through This can be your gam Older 4 

out and priced to sell at $65,900. C TY OF V CTOR A B<Jrm <* ith 2 F oW ranova- 
Your hosts 1 J U Y v ,v r ' r , hon» on 1 ^ acre in Glartford area. 

Lee W robe I ^7 'L A 3- W Iwusa, Live in the house and sojKlivIde e 


PLACE 

Follow arrow at McKenzie and 

B#0k "3$EN HOUSE 
Mon. to Thurg. 

6 pm. to 8 p.m. 

Sat. and Sun “ 

1^. noon to 6 P.M. 

Trade up. Ask about our trade 
oroqraff. ARNOLD MARR 
388-4434 anytime 

OPEN HOUSE 
FRL, SAT., SUN. 

1 P.M. to 3 f* M 

REDUCED $4000 Ium.hedxa'tc 5 possession 

QUIET CUL DE SAC 



NEW LISTING! 
WILLOWS 

OPEN FRI., SAT , 
SUN., 1:30-4:30 


$2,075 DOWN 
LOW MONTHLY l! 
PAYMENTS 

RENTING? Lovely three BR. top 
Moor condominium, mountain' 
view* compiata with stove, fridge 
and drapas. Close to Esquimalt 
Sports Centre. Let me show you 
how easy it is to buy. 

JACK (BILL) HOWES 
477-014 1 658-5100 


1 :.10 to 4 00 - 3115 EARL 


oanorama. Full basement with 
arga bedroom and TV roo m wtth _ __ __ __ 

™TRADES UREY -ewneuv wvl 

BUY IT WITH J* L 3I!? F doug MSKITT ,n««|S',? “ w U>M> Jou’U agree tha( thi» 2 bdim 

a nnicivir\ alp^a, . I For information or appointment tq| character no burnt home 

A FRIEND NEW HOMES A w i.rr_.« ur - c *'i -.?« 

Lovely larqa comolatalv rebuilt 
family home on two leva's. Living 
room, 3 bedrooms, large dining 


v'vw uui nume* ceil mrs. rai ..__ 

Sauiniar. Kasaoi Const. Co. Ltd., I"ith atone FP, WV carpet!, 

By McLaren • Sl 2 , ? 9 ^ in Rd #t w m se P« rat ® Ka™ge is almost 

room' kitchw^i’tn Mtmg “iTw, **■«*> . All three bedrm 

uu»n Miinoi . 'll area, 


vunroom, 4-oct. bath and sundeck 

' ond living room, ”udjc warranty — 


wssri uJRSl. SsS^TSi'tss'is 

utility room “ 

R>* Priced 

$60 900. See . M. 

STARKE 386 6164 or 479 3866 


Voomdown Rancadcorrwr in ^ CALL TO 
Priced tT^sell ^cktTlt ; DOUG POSKITT 477-0645 

0. See It now with FREOOY__ 

<as»NHr*D 5TAI S'« 5Mt 

Beautiful Spanish style 3 pr i 4 tOT,TLH.f 



bdrm home completely finished in-, Neaf 2-odrm. home on a quiet cul- 
cluding large rec. room, with built j de-sac near Sears Large L.R. and „ 

•n bar only 2 years old. All large a large 20x16 workshop In tn* i ,f you want a comfortable, easy 
rooms. This Is a must to sea. backyard. Call now: 9 -r# ;, hom ^ '. n • v « f 7 convement 

FREDDY STARKE 386-6164 or ROD FINCH 479-7663 location, visit us and make 

479 3866. KEN WILKE 382-9527 oMe !L° n fh * Mkin 9 P r 'C« 

GORGE BEAUTY - »■»* *--- ‘ 


The theme is contfiSt punt 
shawl shirt smarts set off by 
solid shirt with punt trim Try 
checks or tweed contrast too 
Printed Pattern 9469 Misses 
Sues 8 10. 12. 14. 16 18. 20 
Size 12 (bust 34) blouse ? 1/8 
yards 45 inch, skirt, shawl 
blouse tnm 3^4 yards 
SI bO tor emeu pattern -casn 
rnpn'je c: (h-wy utoer Add 2b C 
lot each pattern fot litst-ciass nian 
and handling Send lo Daily 
Colonist Pattern Dept . 

109 Cfocktofd Bivd. Scarbor¬ 
ough Ontaho. MiR 584 Print 

1 CONST. LTD.! SPJSr 

Pattern Dept. (Name of 
paper) Address 


2339 DUNLEVY - OAK BAY 
Excellent 2 odrm home, in-line 
L R.-O.R., $69,000 firm. For fur 
ft cr mlormatio nor to view call 
598 1448 PAULINE CASS 595-3151 $56 000. Choice 5-room bungalow .n 


FAIRFIELD 

BEAUTY 


impodsible to beat in value. 
[ Your host: 

18G-3231 Bob Hahn 5K-1642 


OAK BAY 
WILLOWS 


___ _ _ shopping 

excellent *r*e 'Near jne sea’Tiv- Take a look at 40G0 Ray -1 
; ing room with FP. DR, 3 BRs, one c» 

,of them dn, 2 bathrooms, rec rm, mond St. North and call me : 
‘W! ewce'ient buy. see it anytime. 

ELSIE ChBRIEN day or avt HAL BARBER 

4774)141 477-5470 Ra; 385-1047 1 


Overlooking Lambrick Parx 
lovely 3-year-okl, J bdrrr 
home, ansuila plumbing, fullv 
developed basamant 2 fr* 
places, built-in garage, nlcatv 
landscaped. 

ARNOLD MARR 388-4404 any 

time , 

PRIO*' REDUCED FROM 
$81,900 to $79,900 
OPENHOUSE 
SAT. AND SUN. 

3 P.M. to 5 P.M. 

53 LINDEN AVK 
By tne sea bv tt4 park. ttu$ 
4-bdrm. home is a classic, 
baautv, has an excellent fioo. 
plan that adapts to modern liv 
Ing. Room tor den and library 
Space for family room. Lots of 

ARNOLD MARR 388 *414 any‘ 

__ *me 

14.900 GLANFOHD in rr C 

A httle Jiaint on the oufrlde r,AWNVHHW$9 : 5U0 

and "Voila” you have a 4012 .♦ ' 

, , .. _ * __. Follow arrow a» 

lovely 1 storey 3 bednx>nt OPEN HOUSE 

full basement home on a SAT 3 to 5 P .M. 

quiet street close to schools. Gordon Head and Edgeio* 

and tiiK c « dar and sh8ke . con 

ano Due nne<» i temporary. Excutive featurps 



] AGRt OF LAND 
6 YEARS YOUNG 


KIPOT 


oebbTe-das^ektarlorTspaciou!. and 4 BR home_2 ’ j ta ttis. anterta'n 
charming interior. Asking $a?,$oc., m«nt DR, femity room with 
TO Virw PLEASE CALL FAU- FP, oan't ^at this yeOja JU.800. 
LINE CASS 598-1448, 595-3151. (BILL) HOWES 


$44,900 


BRENTWOOD 
$71,900 

wH^f!? ^ L i!«S^ 2 *es 

9 fHj laundry off. Great —r#c room wiii wti njr 
l ackyard with fruit treat and gar- yrs old 
bTfur? G 5 iI x 7 e 4 »ia H ra$ — immaculate condition 

tle'{5iope»ties ,nJXW c ‘ s » OD 


Tt>ts 2 bdrm.. Immaculate home is 
a must to v,ew fhr tfiose locking 
*or clean and t.dy tvoma_with 
tixinp up to do. LR 



ROD FINCH 

_ KEN WILKE 

or 386-3124 


OPEN HOUSE 
FRI. AND SAT. 2-5 P.M. 

I3a9 KAY STREET 

Builder of Your Future 

479-7663 •option, visit iis and' make’"your, HOMES from $45,000 00 —I, 

-f 0 ff er on the asking price oi ■ 

$41,900. R L Bergstrom in atten watUl^ng 
dance. Thermo u indoMS 

METCHdSIN insulation in ceilinj 

Are you looking tor a 4 -oedroom ' S-y* H r insured warranty 
I home on over 2Vv acres if so, you - -or will build custom 

SSL , «, 0r Sar!K?i5-A»k ^ abuut puMuu.r.. 

' t »9. u * 2 cottages, one of j>articipat.on plan or If 
, V you r* thinking o. nK^n* to 

2!'iSS 'isfi •«l qvii .1 To vijow a small Iwuse. 

382-9527, *nd make your offev on asking i,»-K. r i n i 1 - m .iu l - j 

-R L Sarg^rom ror further irrformatioh 1 


ONE 


Lets be Practical-you tet 
mote for less $ when you sew 1 
Send for new FALL WINTER 
FASHIONS TO-SEW CATALOG Has 
$150 coupon for trte pat 
tern of your choice. 7M 
107-twrt*tt Wf 6 «k $ 1.00 
106 Iwtawt Fart ton Bart $100 
128-fatchwort Quilts $1 50 
124-€ift$ n’ OfW8»8»rt$ $1-51 


OPEN HOUSE 

1161 Oovelly Terr. 

Sat. and Sun. 

REDUCED $43,500 * 

2 BR an suit* bath, DR. modem VAD Af* im r 

Lovely 2 odrm. ng-step home in kitchan updated plumbing and .NOK.MA H1LJ.. 

Sidney - close to shops and far "^ng, flFJve^n parage workshop. 383-77% 384-8101 

net Selling below coat MLS. 0006 condition ms>da and out A_ 

rtal opportunity 

REDUCED $69,500 i*o 

Family size kitchen ~ with extra FORCLOSURE 

S X S DUPLEX 


142.000 


large eating area Large covered 
sa-ndeck could be <.!osed-in tor 
extra family room Full btmt. Lots 


sunken t R. Heatilator F P 
in family room. Larga seu» 
rate D R. 3 spacious bdr r. 
•Entult* den end Roman bain 
Nicely treed *"d **r.dic«p«u 
mhNULO MARR 388-4434 any- 
time. 

SEAVIETV 
(iORDON HEA1> 
DELUXE HOME 
UNDER CXDNST. 
$125,000 

, l r.ia beautiful deluxe family heme. 

• over 1600 sc. fl on main lloor 
I built by one of the best old 
country craftsmen will be ready 
tor Oct. 1 occupancy. Situated on a 
large lot In cul-de-sac iMith lovew 
seaview. Still time to choose vour 
own favorite floor covering and 
color scheme etc. further in 
I formation call: LEO PIGERT 
468-4434 anytime. 

Fairfield 

And only r voars old.^This j 


B C. LAND 

AND INSURANC1 
AGINCY LTD. 


ALBERT HEAD 

S&4.900 _ — __ 

Affective 3 bdrm . no basemf carpoidT .68 acre with' incredible 
rancher with floor to calling fire- views of Victoria. Call today 
nace In living room Large kitch- LESLEE FARRELL 592-7246 

en. Double garage and offka. Patia -- 


— 8 - 5464 , Pgr. _ 

DOUG CODDINGTON 5954)795 

4;i 245f TrdT 47,5iM BICKSTAN PLACE 
OPEN SAT 1 - 4 BRENTWOOD BAY 
687 PEARS RD. * 3bdrm 

Turn ri 


VIEWS! CEDARS!_ 

™*nc™ OPEN HOUSE 

if you love originality, custom de nw Dl 111 PNm I 
s.gn and cedar, you must see this K Y Kl I DFR ' 
home. 3 bdrms.. IVj baths, double *-* 1 ^UILULIX, 

SAT. AND SUN. 
.1:30 - 4:00 P.M. 
Central Saanich! 
1976 Jeffrey Rood 

USt I 


pleas* phone: 
MIKE t56~406tt 

vie 036-400:; 

An>tune 


COUNTRY LIFE 

$119,900 w .. 

Only 25 mins, from di»wn- 7erv herd to duoTicale' , in Fairfield 
. -w.., w .„. , „„ town. This spacious 4 or 5 JT' S .uS^tmnce^iivkL 

Full high concrete bsmt over i7oe landsoaiied ’s-ac lot offers fl? 

REVENUE $145,000 ju,i about exer>thing for the ^ 

8 oacheior suites Showing good re- ^ family. Beautifully decorat- lf!use r tobus and' shoomng and i * 

mTs * f Buiidmgs rpkj T D Ai ON I FT «** " ith T »F» quality and in 3& 

CEN I^?^ U,ET «ood U..P SchoiK rw. 

$54,900 cenfre. golf. curUng. and m»- 44 ^ j0 ^ n *« nyan ** 7771 


■PBMy o* the «b« 
PETER PRIMOAAAD 
MAI A PRIM 6 AARD 


•WINERTON’S 


Sew and Paint! 


realty ora 


IN-LAW SUITE 

Just $54.900 tor this 18 yr. old 3 
t MMICR Rd., lust Past Cent, ffiThi". Kre^no*^ 

3-bdrm., fully-finished lower levet. 5Jff?i?) F *' r9rounds ,urn 00 «.«>™ b LL ep 'Vd' 3 

ivaxm & es"'s~s 


oramk views of Olympic Moyn- fabrfu hi*1 00WS! MANY MORE FEA-’vard ...... 

iains and seaviaws. Close to fish LE5L - E .™J*2r L p L TURES! FULL PRICE JUST HAL BARBER 

nq. riding and hiking trails, ate. D oug r(W&%' M 8 .SOO. FINANCING IS FLEXI 384-8101 Anytime 

VVksklria $71 200 OL.UO COOOINGTON 5954/795 r r«i l Mnw AAA 1 CM i ———-- - 

BL^UOT OPEN HOUSE 

~)A.AA C/V'YI^F DH ^ hv **' t ♦«’ Htring. Build Nowl NEW LISTING SAT 1 30-4 30 

2644 SOOKE RD. ^ «-• 


OPEN SUN. 2-4 


f !d* dJSraf^l of’Gordon Head This vacant home 

u . w .a roiH j fnr ommAnrv in * arpRt 


immaculate 3 bdrm. home ae* - 

ce?Uno W V« l k^hra!^c^in P ^irS LESLEE FARRELL 5*2-7246 ' Sith exoulsi t e° ld )as*e ° Wre~| %S2Xg ^ ° r ^ i 

M x'- SS5S D0UG COC W > ' NOTON »«'» TS!*hSVk?r.i^ 4 i^rth FP."? !s m | r ?*'. n 5 1 ) , , , " i 'L«, T r5S!!. ?S 
sionatly timshao witn unique i?xlo 4 din na l naant to » mast rooms (main) two bathrooms '3rd 

rumpus and extra bath. Lovely O'M llDH PC » I attra<Alve partiefiy ctoaadroughed in) two fireplaces. Office 

rear yard Includes greenhouse, prf U^U'rLL^ . fund^k ThA kitcLn iwoomv ^ 4 th bedroom. Only three veers 

vata oatio, fruit tf ees and mora OArtQODTN QAV wihh aatinq area and qualify Out of town vendor can make 

viS Asking only 15535 o. C.ADBOKO BAY Mm$h vaster ^itV ^^^ne tlexibie 

itoiwi ItIHS 2 bdrms., almoat 1200 sq ft., full Tnere s a spacious 4-Pc. bath CENTURY 21 SUBURBAN 

479-5571 St^r 478-5588 baMfTWIt( Kt-grxH/nd swim- and two more, nic* Bdrms.._com : |_ .REALTY 

VIEW ROYAL “j 
$53,900 , 

3 Bedrooms 

O*ners transferred and have to 
seli tttair 7-yr-old, no-bsmt 
Rancher on Marler. Dr. A stream 
runs through back of property with 
attractive backdrop of trees. Oak 
toors and wood-burning F.P. ini 
arge L.R. Attached carport with 
-ep. workshop. New listlnq. JIM 
RAMSON. Aestgei# Rtty., 388-994), I 
479-5910. 


LESLEE FARRELL 
388 - 5464 . Pgr 
DOUG CODDINGTON 


11 Plus' a’very" Pratty^2-Pc! 'baftw-m; took-FInlayson area. Older char 
592-7246 * nd • larva xawlng-wttlity ^ rm. (3-badroom full-basemant 


$36,000 

100 this 

i a popular par 
tt. »xi42 tot : 
rm. Good wirini 


BUILDERS! 
32,400 SQ. FT. 
PRIME R32 


A stup< 


Reduced from $39,500 this I* a real 
character home In a popular part 
of South Esguimatt, fix 142 tot 3 
bedrooms, sewing rm. Good wiring 
and plumbing, greenhouse, new 
-.♦chan cupboards. $1500 down or 
any offer considered. MLS Jim 
Ranson 479-5910. Wcstgat* Realty 
l td 361-9941. 

A.HOP. 

SIDE BY SIDE 
$45,000 EACH 

New 3 bedroom no step duplex ail. 
on one door. Over 1200 sq. ft 
Quiet location, Fireplace, tots of; 

^rmmntSw >.*«* 

Lt d. 386 -754 5. _ 

BEAUTIFUL 

BRENTWOOD 
SINGLE FAMILY 
HOME ON 
SEPARATE LOTS 

2 BEDROOMS $45,000 

STRATA DUPLEX 

1.00 bicfFKP^.^down. 

Now completing- Early occupancy. 
Buy direct from builder-developer 
under ASSISTED HOME OWN Eft 
SHIP PROGRAM 


back oarden with some trees home, oq quiet afreet. Close lo 
595-0793 1 Exclusive with schools, bus arvd snooping, Near 

BETTY SHEPHERD new furnace. 100-iamp wiring, cop- 

388-5464 Pager 704 per plumbing One bedroom on 

LORENZ&N realty LTD main, two up. Large bright kitchen 

- — wlth dining area. Living room! 

OPEN HOUSE isw? L.rv ahss 

^ rLM 1 1W W large backyard Asking $48 000. J 
" 3 cr\l I A r\D A CT i Please call 384-5077 or 398-17C8. 

350 1 QU AL/KA 51. )35g Lang St Must be seen inside 

DAILY 2-5 PM by owner 

apartment site. Nice, F ue N | N r,( ay appointment 5 ve * r 0,d ' 4 bedr .°? m r? p,lt j-* w#l 

__ .. entrance* on 3 side*. . 7 E y^ N r^S5 8Y rnmaSI^ v .mdat on • • <re W.Ojao Cove. 

Area of proven apt. dwellers L ™ T ^?f Sf*a are *' 2 fireplaces, kitchen with 

cloae to all services. Vendors will ifj 1 J 975 - *" !••• 3 “f.”’*' J eating area. Living room, dining 

carry large agreement to halo, i ^ h *L , new H *”•' ®T. rm' room - d * n - bui,t ,n wpi^hces Inc, 

Phone for further details. ’full base, huge new raogames rm. vac(Mjm . Lara* basement, double 

598-3852 595-3151 Almost completely secluded bv ceraqe plus carport. Sundeck.- 

RONALO WAY blgh hedges end woods, with pr^ Paved circular drive. A real op^ 

vale lane OU-stceet parking for 5 portunltv. Well below replacement 

-- » ■ ■ - —*or 6 vehicles. Near bus, school, co »t a t $84.ooo Phone 656-6637 eve , 

stores, and only 5 min. to town nlngs. 

Full Price $84,500 open house 

S. W ANDERSON LTD. U'RT A\m <!AT * 

382-9144 Res .3854)279 r K - 1 - A * >IL ' 1 

1:304:00 

1W1 TAMPICO PL. 

Beautiful new soilt level borne 

BY BUILDER w.«Jdr r - 

7816 Scohor. Drive (runs ^outh off 
Mount Newton Cross Rd.) brand 
new 3-bedroom, electric heat, thar 

mo windows, 2 fireplaces, cement iYilT" f.-™. •y.’.ryy. 

driveway and paflo Priced at 287-8879 t l a . r * ■baUa **' 7557 
$61,800 Phone 652-1579. 65M739. Capital City Realty Ltd 




^totTirwt ar work^o%k*in #t fu!? tanep. Over 2,900 «q. ft. of UNQUESTIONABLY 
SSSi. ?. n rZr.«.” r ,X EM livin « •«•- 3 ,lunil > THE BEST BUY 

room off large kitchen, rec. i ^ ^ ^ mott beautifu- homes 
rrxtm, patios, sundeck, dou-,tor the orofassional or executive 
We garage. For a contented t*aturaa. 

__ ^ _ Lie — make an offer now’ First time on market Built by 

OFFERS TO $42,500 tv, v,«, call Mike Ruddy. 1 «'.* _ 

i jsiorwrvtJS&stA. 

. - Park Pacific Inv. Ud. 

3SM124 


incL. screened alum windows 


TOWNHOUSE 


w•*. McludM DR. Bull* 


REALTY WORLD* 

OPEN HOUSE iMbr-K 

sot 2-4 Fl « INhLAW 

721 Front St. 1 5 BR, 4 bath modem bto home sit-' 

bedrooms, dan. renovated older uated on cul-da-sac in Central 
home just e otock from Vic West | area. A real buy at $75,900 tor 
Eiem school Full price 836,900. 1 large tarn ly - easily financed. 
$1,800 OOWN PAYMENTS TO Possible AG lor sale 
QUALIFIED BUYERS. ML. 

BOB CARTER 598-6143, 385-24*1 ONE to FIVE 

HPFN HOI KF BRUCE BATEMAN 
UrtN MUUbt 477.0141 384-2827 

Sat - Sun 2-4 thc permanent 

1590 Kenmore 

Spacious family home on compact! 
lot. Over 2100 sq. ft. of Creftsmen- 
buiit DUTCH COLONIAL, featur-' 
ing crows hall plan. 2 firaolaca*. 
double-aiass windows, giant sun¬ 
deck and carport. Driveway with: 
oodles of parking. MLS. 

KEN WALTERS 479-7583 
BOB CARTER S98-6143 

Swlnerton, Stewart Clark Ltd. j 


__apple Cherry and walnut 

trees. Over 2500 sq. ft. of livinq 
area including — 4 bedrooms 
master with f pee. bathroom en 
suite. Also, 3 full bathrooms 
Large family kitchen with B I. 
disnwasher and Jeneir range. Se 
Derate dining room. This tower 
level has a delightful rac. room 
with maple parquet flooring, F 
place ana bar. Bedroom, bathroom 
1 end office (or 5th BO plus larqe 
rv i Tn Storage area and laundry roon 

_REALTY LTD Add to these e double carport 

M Butioa Sr. But. JM 4111 ,^•^““pSrtiSJ'* 0 * or 



(frbrir 

Sfalty ltd. 


OPEN HOUSE 
SAT. 1:30-4:30 


! To vlaw call 

1472 HAM LEY-ST. 

_ lot on quiet street, 
to Richardson St;, b 
Kipling. Thl* 


saoai 

f kitd 


irata 


I T7» LILLIAN PO **8-9*tl I 


OPEN HOUSE 


BUY A DUPLEX LOT 


And build your own revenue prop¬ 
erty or Hue In the Victorian style 
I home with 3 bedrooms, and rtno 
i vate. Asking $39 900 But try an | 


Arnold and Kipling. _ 

I tifuily maintained garden 
home Is spacious with te 
dining room, big r 
2 badrms., master ixxir, nrw 
living rm with FP, wide bright 
entrance 3rd bedrm., Rac. rm.. 
and separata toilet down in 
9 ood^ work area. Offers to 

BETTY SHEPHERD M8 54*4 
Pager 704 


PETER er PATTIi BARDON 
388 6758 3B4-3947 


OPEN 

TO 

VIEW 

SATURDAY 1 00-4 30 



8624 Bourn* Terrace 
15 p.m. Sat. and Sun. 


930 KENTWOOD TERR. 
BEST OF BROADMEAD 


BY 


OWNt?R; 


OPEN HOUSE 
SAT and SUN., 1:30 to 4 
CADBORO BAY 
FABULOUS VIEW 
2574 VISTA BAY RD 

JUST LISTEO. Large unique 
family home with 5 or 6 
bdrms. 3-4 pee. plus 2 pee. 
baths. Gorgeous large living 
room that gives you a faeiina 
that you *r* sitting on too of 
tn* world. Dalux# brteht kitch¬ 
en with both-In appliances. 
Separate laundry off kitchen. 
Delightful rec. room 25x25 ft. 
with gleaming parquet floors 
and tn* most unique PIPE 
ORGAN Installed that vou'v* 
ever heard. Large temllv room 
with view end walk around 
sundeck. 2 fireplace*. Zone 
controlled hot water heat. 
Extra large workshop and 
noboy room at ground level. 
Shelter tor 4 cars. Larqe oar 
den area—ideal place for pool. 
Choice quiet street overlooking 
the Bay and a view of Mt. 
Baker. This home ran te 
bought with or without tn* fur¬ 
niture and pip* organ. Reads 

ticaily priced at $1»J)80.- 

CROW 592-49#9. J95-2I21 

NATIONAL TRUST 


Saanichton 


>d patio. 

I 652-1579, 

BY OWNER 

Four -«v«l lull' 3500 H «. 
j finished area, spaclbus entrance 
I ie*dinq to large Ir and dr 4 
bdrms. master with ensulfe. fami¬ 
ly room end rumpus room, beau¬ 
tifully finished. Intercom and vaeu- 
- urn system, 3 sundecks. 3 fire- 
: places, end much more, a must to 
! see. $13S,000 l 477-3139 j _ ’ 

Broadmeod 


or a large corner tot. 4 bdrms, 
3 baths, family rm wtth fire¬ 
place, den. - Double enclosed 
oerpae with workshop. Deck 
off dining rm and kltcnon olus 
Cement patio. Asking *81.9 ‘ 

- Shell* IM 

ty Rear 


806 

'.AOTIaW IvLttU. 

Whip up this pretty, practical 
apron in a morning-fun. easy 1 

An apple for the hostess 
paint it right on the handy poc 
ket lust A, yard 45 inch fabric is 
all you need for this jiffy apron 
Pattern 80b. apple transfer 
directions 

$i 50 tor each petie" - cash 
i deque or money oruet Add <?58 
to» each patiem for first-clan mad 
and handling Send lo: Daily 
Colon's! Sutler" Depi 
109 Clock lord B'vd Suebor- 


THE PRICE IS LOWER 

- - „ Than ever so buy this 4 -bdrm 

\/IFW OF THE SLES ho "'*' fi * •♦***» ^ mii tt or tiv* 

V iuvv \sr I nt IjLLJ there. I1 i$ located In a quiet Oak. 

20 Minutes to Town B av border area Asking only I DELIGHTFUL MODERN RO&T 

Stranity and comfort of country ; $54 *00 But try an offer' AND BEAM WITH OVER 3600 SQ 

nvmg nestled on .42 acre; selac -1 PETER or PATTIE BARDON FT LOADED WITH EXCITING A 

. . , -- - 784-3947 \EATUftEB. MUST BE SEEN ^ 

- - 


kvelv treed, with superb vlaw of xb-6258 
1 Haro Strait, islands and Mt 
Baker Newly renovated, LR with 
FP. dining rm. and kitchan over 
looking the bav; bu.lt-ln Corning 
Ware stove, watt oven; 2 BR, der 
1 laundry rm., 2 bathrms., full bsrnt 
1 City wafer plus extra well for gar 
dans. $89,500 

E Russell 

656-6141 382-0051 595-4413 


OPEN 


"People Helping Peoo # ' 

OPEN HOUSE 
1620 Ash Road 
"Move 'Right In' 7 
Sat. & Sun. 
2:00-4:00 


RON 


IMMACULATE . 

_ torn*. artistic ally 

finlthad, - - 

rooms, IV* 

with floor _ _ 

place, large laundry room 
rawing room, beautifully 
i aued. Large tot, low taxes, 15 
minutes from city. $67,900. 
178-0041. 


FORK LAKE 
9 Ml. CIRCLE 


COO gSO 9 d in quiet part of Sidney. 

. ^ w foom With Stove type fireplace. 

Now undar construction Drive^by; famllv room large kitchen with 
450< Cottqntree Lana and 922 Cot- plenty of cupboards, fridge and 
tontree Close, off Emily Carr ,tove. a ttachad garage. Rhone 
w»»fwa*• R•• tty Ltd.. 388 - 9941 , ' 656 - 4918 . After 6 Tueadav thru Sat, 
JIM RANSON, 479-5910. _all day Sunday and Mon. 


’ Th* ideal siting I Surrounded by 

T SI 1 2Sif„ , 'SL l I7 , !JST b T£5 

to .diina oon. ud 5* ‘ p ?: k "iS 1 ..S*',:Sr b ZLlV 


ROYAL OAK - BROADMEAD 
Quality horn* with beautiful Olym¬ 
pic view on .6 acre. 3 beetroot, 
iving room with firapface. dining 
room, new kitchen, larjgjf ^ 


the sparkling quiet lake but V*t 
only 15 minutes from Wootoo. 
Twenty eight year old two bed¬ 
room horn*, large living room wtth 
rock ftraptaca, sunroom; 
basement on 1 - acre with 160' 
tgrfront. Rrlc* $69,900, Call CHRIS 
GREIG 386-6164 or 478-5953 Cattle 
Properties Ltd. 


JUBILEE HOSPITAL AREA 
Under construction, graft ratlr* 
anachad garage Flexible posses- mant or starter hom* 2 bad- 
sion. $78,900. 479-3342. rooms, n* basamant. custom cabl- 

— -* _ ■ _ nets, carport, fireplace, cadar sld- 

CONOMY $37,100. 2 BEDROOMS* ling anterior Purchase early and 
fireplace, new wiring — heat pick out own oalnf. cOrpet, siding, 
fruit trggs, oarden. quiet |colours. etc. $47,500. Phone 



SIDNEY $45,500 

By owner. 3 bedroom home. Locat- •- 
ed In gutet part of Sidney. Living ! 


WATERFRONT BY < 

income property, three bedroom iAotvvartoitv. Exci 
house, living rom, dining room,. 4 * 0 •?.^P on,, . 
kitchen, firaolaca, fridge, stove. 


(VNER 

dtonally watl-bultt 
aval. Immaculat* i 


R iiLiif'/ tn '» m»a, 8 'vtw/ i- a\_ 

washer, dryer, combined with one- trr *'•£» * 

bedroom house consisting dinette, 477Tjrz _ 

kitchan. 3-pi*ce bath, aas heated. OAK BAY — 
In Como* Valiev. $«000 firm. 


taculafe 

Wall landscaped. Ctoae to 1 
Ooan Sunday 1-4 i 


OVER 2055 SQ. FT. 

5 bdrm* 3 bath*, a *uT# cuide 


OWNER SOOKE 

OPEN HOUSE. 2 5 OAILY 
Raducad from $54,900 to $52 700 

i Finished baaai- “ " "- 

I low taxas. Oftai 


BAY - WELL MAIN-! 
3-, 3-badroom horn* on level j 
lot, quiet street, block from sea, 
carpets, drapas, 5 appliances I 
$64,0 9Q. 592-1688 . I 

PRESTIGE LOG HOME 
vacy. 13 acres, tanlaafic 
Swimming pool 
Owner (78-4320 


PRI- 


AAany extras. 


plainly pattern number youf 
name address 

NIW fOR 1979' NEtDUCRAFT 
CATALOG Hundreds <fi beaut, 
tul things to make' 3 bee 
patterns inside Send lbi 

i?9 Quick Easy Tramfirs $1.50 
128 Pilche»*rt Quilts SI 50 

127 Afghans 'i* Dwlm Sl-56 

128-Grafty Fl<m#r$ SI.50 

125 fetal Quttts $150 

124-Gifh ’n’ Ornaments $1.50 
123-Stttch’R' Patch Quite $1.25 
122 StdfTB'faff OmMi $125 
121Pitt8R ShaanOra $1.50 

120Xmh84 8 WarBrsfce SI.00 

HSflMMf Ciichef 
111 CricikftwMi S^MfM 
UMittfFm* Quite 
US-tiBpf# Citmel 
Ilf Cawpi efi Afghaa 
112-fna AMmmb 
U l-Hatrfhi Crachef 
107-lRstaM Smmbi 
105-ln8tMt CiBchet $1.00 

103-15 Quite te 1od*t 75< 

102-Mmbmb Quite .754 

IQlQuiH CaModten 758 


LAST CHANCE 
TO SAVE $7000 

ON RfcM. ESt»TE COMWISSION 
This beautiful home In Ardmore is 
priced to sell at $113,080, aporalsad 
at $130,000. Next week It will be: 

a ted with Real Estate for at least 
000 more ** aero, sauna, base¬ 
ment. completed except for carpet 
tog, 3 badrms, 2 baths, dream 
kitchan, 2 FP, huo* wrap around 
dark, electric Ri for gfe*nhqu«e or 
*ub ‘ 


Sot. 1:30-4:00 
1255 Fairfield Rd. 

Cut* end cozy 2 bed¬ 
room hgm#, almost iik* 
new kitchan with eating 
arga. Pull baseman). Ha* 
spare bedroom, fully «*n«d 
tread tot, close to •»! 
amanitias. Light comma* 
cial zoned tn attandanca 
388-7557 Greta 592-6372 
CAPITAL CITY REALTY 
. LTD 


NHL .... . large family home wth 

_ MUST BE SEEN badrms. and den Master bedrm. 

S. $154 900. YOUR HOST M ha« double ciosats and ansu't* 
LAWSON. CALL 388-6275 AND Beautiful wood finished rac. roo-’ 
ASK COR PAGER 2478 OR PARK with fireplace and padded bar 
PACIFIC INV. 383-4124. Contemporary Hvmg room wit ac 

cpurfeN4r<owo x ~ o>rb«Tu - iSSi. “ 

nlty knocks for someone moving to $86,500 

th* Courtenay Comox area. Beaut. JIM AAcNAUGHT S92-028I 

•»t secluded acre with two I or 3854771 (anytime) 

3-badroam names. Principal real- —"— * — " 
dene* is 1300 sq. fl. with wall-to- ^ ^ 

wail carpet ttyouohout, large Ily-; SOVC ^ $ $ 


ing room, heatilator firaplaco, full j 
basamant with rac. room. Second 
home is approx. 1000 sq. tt. and 

- - - living, 

fish , 


presently ranted. Countr 
-"s everything. SF 


; close to everything Shopping, fish j CWVNER - BUILDER 
ing and skiing, «M this for only Thre# beautiful nearly-nev. 

! ,. r -MM mi ,, . M ' 4iui4n*llu nlinnu, KnratAa 


Fantastic Buys 

DIRECT PROM 
OWNER - BUILDER 
bgauttfut near ly-naw m- 


, Cpmox. B.C. 


10 ! dividuaiiv planned home*, 
j 1. Gordon Head. Wc 


Ough Ontario. M1R5B4 Ptmt Aorkshop. sunken tub in aneuit* 


much more. 

OPBN TO VIEW 
SAT - SUN 
1 - 7 PM 

»5I5 Gleneig Ave 


SECLUSION — SEA VIEW 1300 sq. ft. with sauna, landscaped 
Horn* of quality construction 1430 tread, vlaw tot 
sq. ft. on main floor. Large rooms. 

7 fireplaces. 2-car qaraqe. Close to 2. Cowlchen Bav $88.30* 1986 

school, beach and store .59 of an sq. ft., ’ 5-acre, landscaped, tread 
acre. By owner. $894)00 658-8466. partial seaviaw. 


MUST SELL! 

COLWOQD 

A tastefully decorated, spacious ' 

SToiJrS SS**?* c S!*« ! SEA VIEW HOME “* *' N ** “ ' 

and will took at »<' J®**® 0 *^* Fully developed 3-bdrm. immedl - 1 
otters. This horn# toWMihao -t * occupancy. Offers to $87.v0Q, 

'tisrrLZ*’. zr.rs i '?n& 

Tiuweitiy «»» rooms, rec room, games room, 1 '7 PARKLIKE SETTING 3 BED- men). Financing available One o* 

(oH Bradley Dyne Off West Seen-: baths. Drive-to garage shake roof'room horn*, ensuite. full finished' these could be suitable tor you. 

• A. BM . _, ____ Pluu rail m* Kium.nl riniinl »,>riv,rI %n»r» I VI*-* anwtim* 


endvc A oec 

fw 1250 sq tt. 


treed, partial sea- 


OPEN HOUSE 
930 LODGE ST 
SAT & SUN. 

1:30 - 3:30 

Just reduced — delightful 2 BR 
Tudor sty to. hom*^ Beamed ceil - I 


M 

M 

8S 

.758 

$1JI 

$1.80 


LR with FP. on well 
plus 2 flnishad 
Ibie BR in a high 
xcellent value at 


i, large 
developed 
hobby or po«sl 
basamenf. Ex 
$53,500 

ART STREIGHT 
^GARDNER REALTY 


and much more Please call m# basemenl. rtoud ecaroort space 1 View anytlr 
immediately before its gone tor RV. askin; $63,900. 2890 Glen CALL 
otters on $62,500 Lake Road 478-1112 _ 

CJrn. 3 or 4 bedroom modern bun 
aafow. Larqe rec room, double 
carport, bio lot. $89, 900, 992-453 0. _ 

BY OWNER, SOOKE, I BED- 
room home, full basamant, Swed¬ 
ish fireplace, dining arga. all on 3 
subdivided lots, all SOxlX'. 2047 
Sasaanos Rd 642-3812. 


721-3756, VICTORIA 


Block Bros Realty Ltd 

NEW HOMES 


L ^ 13 


3 NEW HOMES LEFT 
PRICES SLASHED 
save $. Huy direct 

3 bedrooms. 1!4 baths, doubt* car- 
‘100 sq. priced at 
AND- 


ports. App. 1 

$82,750 


>$63,800 


IN 

ON^HEAD 
. SAAN “ - 


C ^^, NICH 

Your Con van lance 

Pleas* Call __ 

HARRY ATKEY Evaa. 398-17J7 


385-4211 


W Cadillac Ava 


LANGFORD, IMMACULATE,! 

comoact 7 bedroom, targe land 

- scaped lot, decked swim pool 

„ - . 3 bedrooms,, larat garden area For mor# Infor- 
'tors. 642-59S3. motion call 478-5968. 


Open tor viewing 
Weak days 10 e.m. 7 p.m 

a t and Sun 2 p.m -4 p.m 
f Field. 479-5270 or 38* 0 


CEDAR HILL. ONE-THIRD ACRE 
with oaks. 4 bedrooms 2 baths, 
dining, rac. room, sundeck. 2500 
square feat living area. 16 years 
old. Near schools, shopping, bus 
Small 6 'tto Firs! mortgaqa. 47?,500 
or rent with option. Principals 
only. >83-4071 _ _ 

i A T T R A C T I V E 2-BEDROOM 
home Some extras 1015 tier* fi. 
on Oak Bav border. $52 
1598-4987. 


ROOMY MODERN FAMILY 
home in View Royal. Wall located. 
Ooan to deaf* on smaller place or 
condominium. 479-4967. 


Excel lent VLA built home, J bathe 
large tot. 852,ooo. 




3-BEDROOM HOA 
_ jmant wtth drlv 
garage. Private fenced y« 
$54,000. 586 Whitaaidt. 479-9930. 


OWNER, JUBILEE AREA 
patlfhtful 2 bedroom home, wi 
to wal'. haatad greenhouse, a 
port. $444)00. 598-576 9 mornings 

BEST BUY IN FAIRFIELD — 
3-b#droom renovated home near 
water, school, stores, $55,000 - 

owner 385-5136 evenings. 


52 HOUSES 


Your choice — from 1 to 6 bed 
rooms from On* Dollar down and 
up. all areas — priced from 

S2? 500 to 4S7 500 

479-7161 R.W. RHODES ' 479-9241 
National Trust Co. Ltd. 


$64,900 

.249 sq. ft. 3-badroom home has 
a bright carpeted basamant suite, 
2 ft rap faces, enclosed carpoi t 
fenced backyard. Open house Sal 
urday and Sunday. 7745 Wallace 


HERITAGE HOUSE ON QUIE.T 
cul-da-sac at *19 Avalon. Exce'ie ' 
condition, very clean inside and on 
a large, well-kept lot. Fuilharilan* 
grant. Phon* owner at: 3B4-1 &51 
tor appointment ._ 

H ACRfe PRIVATE 

Cadar Hill area, lovely 3 badroem 
no basamant. covered garage 
Close to schools toua. shopping 
459.500 1 435 Wend* Rd 477-560! 
No agents please 


l 








, kitsuJLL 


















































































o 


Motors FOR SAL r. Ut IIOl'SKfl FOR salr 



Montreal 

opeIThouse 

1572 Richordson 
Sot. 1:30-4:00 

fir*. Walk vp Impressive wide 


Montreal 
Trust $ 


_vo impraaalvp wide 

it«pe to mu mansion ilka ' c k a a. p-v-t* 

entry, huge foyer. than, quality SMART 
baama. oosts, built-in loaded 
glass cabinets 


Near Langford 'Lake 

Bright with attractive cornar 
P*na Windows. Good looking 
Hurdy and votlaaa ins** *nn 

evdurucb 

piocq. ferr~~ 

ianoscaeoa < 


f . 
Baavtitu - 
| to vlaw. 


gi«M caoi'Wia afOUnd ttw 

oiaaaa In both tho larga LJ 
and DR Monelgn expression 

-- - -* avaam k.\th t*\a 


. ourv mooarn'ad. 3 t ■■ 
nomq. bamt., dan. studio area 
In uooar level ovar looking 
Olympic Mts. and taa ... For 
odor viewing ceil 

ma$g% 


value mla family noma nee to 
offer! Faaturaa include piaster 
construction, oak floors, brloni. 
fan^iy slra kitchan with eotVnq 
oar, s bdrma. and dan, plus 
hot watar noatino. AM of tnls 
>s sitting on aoorox. V» acra of 
rock gar dans and lawn, wnats 
more, fha ownar naa author 
irad a pries reduction from 
KujflOO to 579,900. Tor viewing 

^ V G^Yt>ON HOO«R 


OPEN HOUSE young family? 

Tnia 2-etorgy. 3 bdrm. cherac 

7616 Blackthorne 
Sat. 1:30-4:30 


At lit.tOO. tshl 2Vi yaar voune 
noma * on# of tha baai values 
on tha markat today. Testqfui- 
•y appolntad and totally lm 
maculate. thia warm family 
noma faaturaa 5-ahapqd L.R.- 
DR, bngfd kltctjen with fa- 
iiy-sxad aating araa. 3 
•drnu on main with Master 
Enauite. Tha ■ ■■ataMd 
*eedv ta 
rour naac 
is sltuT 
da-Sec 


t*r noma is parfset tar you. s 
taaturing a larga kitchan with 
an aating araa, separata dining 
room, full oasamant and much 
morq. Situated at 1511 Fall St. 

» quiet street off Oak Bar 
Ave., this horn# Is vary conve- 
niant to schools, shopping 
transportation and tha Rtc 
Center. Asking price on this 
5 is 157,too Cal for via*' 


MLS L 

S 


vlaw Inc 
ORA YOON HOOKE R 


bftjtd^kl 

"ltd aa 

1JBB-. ■ ■ I_ 

The basement is 

sVvTtestes? All tms RI PE FOR 

SttUSf SUE 5' TWEMCKIING 

and UDdatad aarvtcai 


OPEN HOUSE 
FRI. & SAT. 
1:30-4:00 

915 Runnymede PI. 1 

Prime araa — Ouiat street gf 
estaottanad homes - a baauti- ; 
•ul prlvata lot almost 104)00 sq. 
tt. Living — Dining rooms —t 
wall to wall over oak. 3 Born* 
main, study or 4th bedroom in 
oesment and workshop — • 
MLS. 5*9.900. to vlaw anytlma 
Ceil: 

D BECKNER 

314-2111 477,4*94 

NO-STEP HOME 

r-odrm. home in Sidney. 2 
clocks to tea and 1 block to 
shops. Roomy L.R. with tp 
Appliances In kitchan. Work 
shoe, garaging tor 2 cars. | 
Sack land. Easy home to heat. 
and run with low taxes |l*7S>| 
— S204.00). imme. poasaaslon , 
and wall maintained. Price re- I 
Cucsd to 13* 300 MLS. 

456-3*34 MAJOR LACE 454-2438 


r*t surprl 
mts an offer 


Of. tWO llOflY. 
noma located 
flaw furnace 


npa far development at Jndus- 
trial -warehouse complex*! are 
qrowln* all around Re nt* In¬ 
come white you wait. Pre s ent 

^fXhSstSr^ 


*d|itarCity 

REALTY 

WO^Pan^keJ^JBI^- 


1343 FINLAY90N 

Cosy, dean 2 BR, plus on# In 
D»m*t. horn* with It s easy. 
cart lot is Ideal for retireds or 
starters. Close to Rec. centre, , 
golf. Shopping, bus ate. Make 


SIDNEY 


One lava) home on quiet cul- 
de-sac. Sea views and 100 yds 
to oaach. Firaolac*. HW. 
floors In L.R. 0Qod dining, 
xltchen with pafio 2 db*e 
odrms. Garage-workshop. Utili¬ 
ty. Ideal rotlrement home. 
149,500. MLS 35090. 

4-3*24 MAJOR LACE 454-2431 


Roberts Bay Area 

Attractlva 4-odrm basement 
• home. l'/i be ir, room*. rec. 
r oom w ith fp. Garage- Ctdar 
cjnoecv New carjwrno over 
niqdwood. Fenced back garden 
with swimming oool.' Cen- 
mal for schools aha marines 
see glimpse and minutes to 
-eecr. and park. Bus route 
Immaculate. S62 80Q. with va¬ 
cant possession MLS 39312 
*’*39?4 MAJOR LACE 654-2438 

A Distinct 


Home 


‘ J “- * turei tat 

•as 

oma. The 


Rd. Ovar acre of natural eat 
ting with a sweep of easy 
•ront lawn to show oft 
lovely, now vacant, home, 
front slat* entrance opens to a 
fully carpeted m*ln«floor living 
era* Including a separata 
sunny living room, formal din- 
ng room with its mirrored 
wan. large l-shaped kitchen 
with E.A., buih-ln watt oven, 
counter stove, dlshwesher. 
master BR with an suite end 2 
'•rge closets, main bath and a 
second bedroom or dan. The 
gracious lattice-covered patio 
affords comfort even on cooler 
days. The carpeted lower floor 
living space with substantial 
storage areas exits to a double 
wide carport. Extra parking 
pads for family or guests. Of 
*ered at 5*7 JOO. It'S worth your 
0f>6N DAILY 

1 00-4:00, 

.’f6-2in MURRAY LUCAS *54-4956 

MAGNIFICENT 
WOODED SETTING 
WITH SEA VIEW 

On S beautiful acres Spacious 
custom-design home surround¬ 
ed by a natural setting over¬ 
looking Brentwood Bay Peace 
fuli seclusion with 3 bdrm* . ? 
fcfths end abundance of glass 
aives a sweeping view of sur- , 
round 1 ^. Thera Is an extra 
'erg* studio off foyer, ideal for 
an artist and toads of room for 
office, sewing room, craftwork. 1 
Also, rac room below for the 
family. Easv-cara land. 2-car 
un,<,w * 

^*-2111 6on Buckner m-w 

Pager ng 

EXECUTIVE 

RANCHER 

SsVW’SMr* 


COUNTRY PARADISE 

.93 Acre* of sami-aacluslgn I 
with a beautiful t500 so * 1 
near-new home with full base-1 
mart and double garage At 
tractive landscaped lot with | 
oodles of parking. 

!.3 ACRES - THE BE^ST TS 
THE WEST 

a lovely home on a park-like 
setting cioaa to New Hospita 
site. Buy before the pricaa go 
uo at on*v M9.90C. 

Wally 477-77*4 

Adei ne 47745*2 

14-DAY OOCUPAXCY 
OPP. JUBILEE HOSP 
SO THROUGH STREET 
Brand new nous*. 1200 so. tt. 
living room *i4th raised heart' 
fireolace. Easy care WW car 
oats. ? sundacks. 3 bedrooms 
•/a?ter bedroom has 2-pce. en 
suite In-line kite’-en end eat 
>ng area. Laval lot opposite 
hoapite! and close to UVic 
Vender will aaalsl in financing 
Try a? tow as 59.000 down to 
qualified purchasers, ideal tor 
retirement home. Rea'utka v 
oHcad at J63.*00. A "Living 
colour" listings by "Realty 
100" Oh ves. clear tnrouoti 
basement hail reuohad in 
piumblnQ tor third bathroom. , 
Lots of area tor famHy or 
rec" room end extra bat) 

Frank Wills 3*47M7 or 3B4426* 

F.XTRA! EXTRA! 
WATERFRONT I 
71 ft. on the sea, quiet bav 3 
nedroom post and beam con¬ 
struction noma. Your own re¬ 
treat in the city. Full price 
with immediate possession 
5*4.900. Dial cut* Stretch 
3M-7557 or 3U-427S pager 2*37. 

OI if FAMILY SPLENDOR 


r 2*37. 

< fRAdOUS HOME 
One-third acra lot Vi bik. to 
tre golf course. Fast oosses 

Sion, full or ice 557,900. Ola! 
Cliff straw' - 


312-4275 p 


r 2*37 


ONE ACRE 

Pius dwelling, double aereoe 
'lA^nlne Shop and chicxen, 
barn. High view property bast 
value In Saanich. »3£ooo Ofai I 
Clift stretch 3M-7SS7 or 
3*2-6275 oagar 2*37. 

BI-LEVEL 

QwnM throughout. thM 3 
bdrm. executive horn* must be 
seen to be appreciated. Sunken 
living room nes full feature 
well, rock fireplace, situated * 
at and of guiat cui-da-sac tha 
home sits sideways on lot fee 
ing treed recreational park 
Asking *79400 To view please 

WALT SLOCOMB 3*3-403', 

ART EVANS 


3M4276 


B1TUGALOW 

ideal starter or retirement — 2 
bedroom. All newly renovated 
new basement, wiring, piumb- 
' h>q furnace and hot wet*<- 
rank. Asking *4,500. See t 
•odav with: 

Art Evans 3064276 


f'ls 

wanted. 


jaaca you' v# always 
Gracious master b.R. 


--'•-wv. wx BLiui/i mwier o.K. 


rac.! 


doors u. 
ueaament. yp, 

'oom. wail ft? 

Wr ^vou've aver 
seen. Pully fenced sunny back 
T*Fd. baautlfuiiy landscaped. 

WHY PULL 
WEEDS ALL 
WEEK-END! 


© 


victoria 
Realty 

LTD M 

^ 386-3585 J 

4171 BORDEN ST 
4 NEW HOMES 

This unique architecturally h. ah near completion, quality built 
signed^st^ duaK cansave *»v Mucker Construction Hard-tp 
vou precious time. Over ijoo 0ffat ttartlng at *61.900 

SQ. tt. Of ftv. spec*. 4 M Mdrm .High Quadra araa near sdiaois 
nr dan. Large mstr. bdrm > * nr1 oark. Trades considered. For 


syrs&ss. 

"'doe. dishwasher, - 
curtains fnaluded. 


aoorox. 
stove, 
end some 


nrw«i« sthowlng pieese call us 
[hytlmf. LlO ^94264 o' 


anytime. 
Colin Muf 


l DOREEN JONGE >AN 


A*-7J0? 


4 BEDROOM 

QUICK 

POSSESSION 

Elementary School 

WEE?,.,, 

Full baaamonf 
Quiet Strait 


S37.500 

1770 Albert St. 
JUBILEE 


A reel little law#! — completely 
- renovated 1 -bedroom, vary, vary 
uierp. Taxes 5266.20 groas. Thar 
mosfat electric, near raw ao- 
oiiancee, i netyda d . Modem kitchen, 
file bath, plus guest bedroom. To 
view please can Ian McGregor, 
3*4-35*5, 6*2-446*. 


Offers lnvtle_ 

«9*.5r0-^ML6 34409 
3*6-2111 MIKE MCKENNA 

3*2-3611 


4 BR. PLUS 


TOWN & 
COUNTRY 
$45,900 


finishing touches you will 
predate, fhg two levels of 




_, WM k 

’urea and truly 
workmansr’- 
deal for 
®r|rad It 1 
*4-2111 
5*5-1507 


Ip In a 


D.ULY COLONIST Victoria. B.C . S*turd*>, Sejjtember 3, 1978 33 

iso hoi sc* run sale .’i* hoi'^kr for hale 


TUMBLEWEEDS 


Ca:i now to via 
,2-badrm. " 

T*ka time to view tM4 two- close to . 

vear-oid home bordering Lam- tesamant with L.. ... - 

■ -t Park and the Gordon cenent lot. For details pkaaaa call 
Recreation Contra, with, g- ant Meeferiena, 3*4-35*5. res. 

‘ -- J " ao- 479 8521 


HI,MOUe-eYB...IVHAr5NEW 

IN THE m - 



MANN 


0da*d 


IIP 11 s. 




ppptnvi... 

WHAT IN 
PLATES ARE 
YOU POIN6r?i 

~v 


8vr 



APEIVTY 
SHOULP PE 
LOOKING FDk 
MORE 
IMRWTWNT 
THINSS 
TOP 01 



FOR SALE BY OWNER 4-BED- 
room house. 3 up, 1 down, on large 
lot. 1300 square feet on main floor 
Approximately 1100 squire feet 

? jwn. Located In Brentwood Bav. 
lose to eismenlory school and 
■ » mopping contra. For Information I 

RAWNS'.FY ! please call Harris .652 1261 day* 0 
tvanlngs or 655-5241 9 a m -4 o.m 


SUBS WHAtWIMPUJ 
MM* EM PALM 


_IW*- 

FUJI? COMPANY 16 

sms 

10®WfrUCAPS! 







WHAT OTHER INPIAN 
GOBS SLOMMINGr 
IN MONACO? 



I. LI 


THIS CHARACTER 
HOME 




*fMK 1 

; Can Tom Evans 652-2620. 

F AM ILY HOM E 1 \ / a n c i tv n 1 

Hara s a great 4-bedroom home In W A J r L 

me Town l Country araa. Big v ' 1 1 ' 


kitchan. 2 bathrw 


$44, 


itnrooms, rac roonrr a rare ooportunltv to buv a custom 

- -_i. Otiari, considarad built home in a vary dasireab# 

on asklno price of 550.900. .. I locafton. close to the jJnjvtrs r v 

5*1*144 KEN MANN 477-6773 I K hoota and shopping. This excep 
tioral home features e spedouv 

BRENTWOOD « 

dining room, lemlly room gttl^Mtar WWW N* Flo* ( 

, kitchen. 2 W baths, J^eadrooms. big £ J**™»™* ??? •: 

.^s?44 ,,o '*Brjs* N N *m i 

sauna with showor. Vary wall built 
Cfyi home In a secluded treed setting. 

— . . tauflfuliy lendsteped In front 

J with views o* tne Meiahef ff 1 >m 

A good ***f**7. ^ orn * Alth 3 bad- re4r sondeck. This new listing is 
rooms, big kitchen• 4-pce. oath. (n 4 grast^a art* and oHars e»- 
Living room with F.P. This house cenent value et $*9,s6o. AvalieMe 
wet undated 3 years ago. Posses- immediately. To view tv apooint 
sion can *>e immediate. Located in, a^nt only, pieaaa Phone Dc^g 
the Wilkinson -mterurben area. MacKIllop 3*4-*075 Pager 115 or 
Very quiet. All offers considered 386-7515. 

598-51S5 KEN AAANN 477-6773 

*ao nnn Gonzales Bay Dist. 

5>4» / VUU .Asking Price 

Vsa an? $ 67,750 

Freshly painted. Just listed Owner 
will look et offers and deals. 

“ -5144 KEN MANN 477-6773 

JUBILEE: NEW 


ENT N-LAW ACCOMMO¬ 
DATIONS. FOR VIEWING CALL 
PATRICK SNOW 5*2-3*31. 

477-6773 'DUKE ROAD DIST. 
New Will Trade for 

Architect- Designed Ho ^ e 
I $69,900 t7oonn^ r ' Ce 

A unique 3-iaval split with sunken jj/y.yUU 
l ying room, massive fireplace. 3 offering tha following 
largo bedrooms and much more. i. 1 *5 Acres or Du*e Roeo 
1 he mature gees on this beautify! ? 4 BR ^3 up 1 dowm) 
lot have been incorporated to add j. 2 sett of p umoing 
extra living spec* for a private 4 . Garage workshoo 32 ti x24 #t. 
outside entertainment or relaxation 3 . 173 * so. ft. of living soece 
erae. Wail situated on a no-cvu 6. 1 * fruit trees, lend ell cieered 
'street In tha Saanich LekehiH d>s- For v.r^mg rail Patrick snow 
brlet. Choose your own carpets. 592-39.31 or Bill Palfrey 598-4210. 

1 cabinets, etc. Only 10S down. MLS 

'“Vl'I'nn N.CHOU.S 1 DRIVE BY 


SMS 4 F W l T» vT^ 
* r - w - L - SAT A‘- M* 


.... about to start a 1** 

_fulkain family home with 3 

bedrooms. 1V» bathe. Beautiful de¬ 
sign. Priced at only 5S4P00. En- 

m-sfu KIN M4 



THE DIRTY 30's 


and ore... 

533.900 and_ 

work but tha price 


later! I have homes at|i 
*36.900. Sure they r 

J ’Ight. 


S«.74« ))9 REG | NA 

EXCELLENT CONDITION AND 
immacDlate INSIDE. FULL 
BASEMENT PRICED R'GHT AT 


MLS. BILL PALFREY, 

.... _lii’rtghf. Ceil! 

JOTr martin „ Character Home 

29*-5144 477-7M0 HOLLYWDDO CH: S 

. . Close to see. 3 bedrooms glus 2 

For the following 5 ads cell up. Granite fireolace. Dak floors. 

RALPH KELLER Icellinos, built-in oak but- 

598-5144 34 hours 7 davsl* #f , ^^ad windows. Modem kitcn 

an. Granlfa porch glassed In plus 
1. Have 3 Properties requiring v.ndeck off master bedroom. Full 
serious renovation rather then cos- basement Truly one of e kind 
metlc Improvement Suggest Bui id- Priced e» 1*2 5*0. MLS. Bill Pe‘- 
! tr or experienced handyman. Cali fray, 596-4210. 
now to disc use poslbiiitles end - q -— 



OPEN HOUSE 
1001 Leeds Place 
Quadra-Lodge-Leeds' 

Sot. ond Sun. 

1:30-4:30 

^-cedVoom, 2 fireplaces no Ptru| 
street, tun oasamant. $55 90C 
3. LAKEH’Ll 

3-cedroom and in-law sutie dorr 
Ov Bjlider. Iso thru street. Good 

! k ?h!1.%S;e.c F o« hill 

2-bedroom, extra large lot, 2 see- 
arste workshooe w red 220 — 35 f 
bast built In one. 

Lot over 6 35X00 so ft. with 2 oad 
room home and separate work¬ 
shop. Zoned 2-taml'y. Build an¬ 
other home and collect *t least 
5?v5 from present Investment op¬ 
portunity. 

-LAKEHILL- I 

Vendors 
Transferred' 




HtliSIDI 

3%* QLAQRA 

47*-71*l 


quiet no ^ 

-XT--• wiring j 


Located on _ ,— , . 

street with underground wiring 
' end similar 2-vr.-old homes. This, 
1 sperkllnq home ofWs a large 
modern kitchen wihrr a. Separate 
DR and spacious LR with unioite 
rock FP. 3 -right bedrooms end 
large -‘-oca betn complete the 
main. Ground level is tasteful 
finished providing laundry room 
fun batn. large carpeted rec room 
and unfinished «th bedroom, 
nerd to »ei tMt value. View with 
me than max* an offer on 565.W0 
MLS. 

GERiRY MARTIN 

5,1*5144 47 

GENTLEMAN'S 
LAKE ESTATE 
l» $155,000 

New West Coast 4 bedrm. contdm- 
ocrarv home on 6.92 acres with 
400' frontaqe on the lake ease¬ 
ment. this 2700 sq. ft- air condi¬ 
tioned home has been soared no 
expense in its construction. Alt 
2<s tr«:ming^ fully Insulated, tinted 
t > inch thermopene, shake root, 
vaulted ceilings, skvtight* low volt- 
auc control wiring Westlncmouse 
-•eat pumo and atactric forced a./ 
l euting. Living room r/Hh 5 he«t 
at nr fireolace o«t. kitchen with 
eet'ng area and fireolace, family 
room with flue tor Franklin 
G'ant master.bedroom Aitn bal¬ 
cony at d jenanasa soakina tub e-y 
suite. A super 0 home a suoerb 

BRUC E F. GIBSON 59*-5U4 


OAK BAY $34,900 
PRICE REDUCED 

l- OR QUICK SALE on tn.« 
lovely tAO-bedroom bwnoaic.- 
situated lust north of the VlL 
LAGE. Fireplace Full higij 
basement with space tor more 
development. O R I G 1 N A L 
OWNER has kept entl'e 
property In tirst class cond 
tion. Nice oarden with berries 
end fruit trees. C#n JOHN 
SHAVER 59S-2121 or 3*2-9444 

OAK BAY BORDEk 

1761 Newton Ave. 
HOUSE SATUROAv 
Older 2 bedroom up¬ 
dated services. 

AFFORDABLE 3 BDRM 

Part bamt., 2-3 bdrma., traea 
lot. closo In *45.900. 

NO MONEY DOWN 

OAC on this near new Seamc- 
Penlnsula, 3 term., tuM bsml. 


COUNTRY UMNG 
ELK LAKE 1.61 ACRE* 

Se*v>ews. Beautiful saemdad ' 
bedrm. home. Amongst tn# 
frees, fruit trees, berries. Stu 
co bungalow. Saacout L.R 
wlf> flreoiaca. dinina roon. 
aiectric kltcnen. aating area 
Ful, cement basement. Ydu 
must see th,$ 5*4 5C0 

DORIS ADAMS 

998-1113 ^ 9*5-2121 

MUST sell: 

LOW DOWN PAYM ENT 
TRY OFFER • 

.Five day possession. Vender 
desperate! 3 bdrms.. dan. lull 
bsmt. nice backyard fulfy 
fenced Qu.et street, close »o 
all conveniences Only *51.900 

r i-storey. 3-bdrm. built-in 
china cabinet In dining area. 
Good condition, quick posse., 
slon. .Ohlv 546,5500. 

or « 

Handymen — give vour per 
sonel touch to this 2-3 bdrm. 
part bsmt. home 11.200 sq. It. 
lot in Go'gt. Gold color eppii 
ardes indudad. only *44 900 
656-5*77 LOLA 5*5-2121 


1121 SQ. FT. 

ON ONE FLOOR 

See this no-jtqp^ci/stgm built ^-bed- 


m 


B.C. LAND 

AND INSURSNQi 
AGENCY «.m 


is no-step custom built 3-bed- 
BUNGALOM. lust one bipc* 
Richmond end Foul Bav 
lose to Ci 


Roads, close to Churcna*. Schoo's. 

3K A* Sffiff 


from 


HotpifelT AND SAVE! BIG L . 

ON FINANC NG on existing 6*4 
per cent 1 st Mortgage mev be as 
sumed. end e laroe 2NO MOR 1 • 
G3^E AT CURRENT If* MCRTgF 
GAGE INTEREST RATfc* eve i>*- 
abe to buyer wtto qualifies A' 
very good deal Ask'no 555 000. 

JOAN BAXTER 479-7161 anytlma 


WATERFRONT 


STARTERS 
RETIREDS 

INVESTORS Tranquility Plus activity. 4 Led- 

1. $:,1.90U. Vlr \$e*t. Spa* rooma, and 2 tamliy rooms for 2 
o hnmf bdrma. and aaH confatned in n* 

ctous J- bedroom home. sult# j ^y,j qq—h and i$i»nd vie.vs 
Feature* large kitclien.|from aM rooms. A baautifu! sandy 

*•♦• shimming. Match 

D.R. vvith r P. separate at C !av and tha pass nq 

L.R. with FP. and fullj*"®* 


LARRY LINEHAM 


3*4-8075 




unw LUCK, WHY CANT 
VOU »e LIKE OTHER 
POOHAWKSn 


WERE PEEPLY CONCERNEP 
AFOltT OUR HERITA6E AW/ 
OR FU1UREJ-— PUT- 



fllJMlSH. rM WS5I0NA1EI.Y 

PEPICATtP TO WHATEVER 

IT IS WE STAMP FOR. 


biftement on a compact 59*.2121 
lot- Exclusive. 

srj.900. Carrick St. Must 1 
sell ‘.‘-bedroom bun^alctw 
on a superb 30x130 lot in ! 

.an ^rea of *;ood homes. 

Exclusive. 

CHUMMY gRABBE 
./S8-3333 ‘ 479*7998, 

hr*.' (Res.) ] 

ATHLON E WOODS 
BRAEFOOT AREA 
1421 HARROP RD. 

$52^00 

immaculate 7-bdrm 

.. ..._mt horn*, situated on 

funy-sorvkad tot. Peasant lI^a. - - 

of Mt Douglas and Surrounding f^ wsWr* ^ 

| vollav. Living room, Acorn tire-1 ! *_ 1 

place, spacious, bright kitchen., ,r# ** <nd •" 

1 dining area, sliding glass door to S4n.900 

deck, new w-w cerpet, seperete MICHAEL BURR 993-7165 

" r TW. 384 9335 



it; 


3*4-9135 

LARGE LOT 
LARGE HOME 
:Tnere*s e tot of value here - 
large living and dining araas. de'' 

situated ff* MM 

l^vv$ #no on* owroo^ on tM dno 


urraoe 477-0716. 


idavld burr - 


A.H.O.P. 

HOUSES 




1557 PEAR ST. 

| for the small family, extensively 
renovated to new home Hande d*, 
beeutifu'. open plan. ? plus bed 
rooms, sitting, dining room, ft-e- 
piece large, sunny kitchen with 

^V* vour cWc# of caroets cebi- • mu<h sbuqht-etter family area. 

1 s? ,*« .ZiUmZZi' iX!. sr», raKa* mo * < * v ‘ 

with fireplaces. $1250 down. Full TL£fSLf™2:_•_ 

price itS.OOO. S-vear bu! der war BY OWNER, 3 YEARS OLD 3 
renty. For more Information phone bedrooms corner «ot in Gter.Mra 
638-5690 area. *57,500. Call 479-2450 a(t*r i. 


X , 


. •; iJ —a t M Pi 


\'S& : t 


’ »-V / Xyi \ ■ -V • lv. 


























































































































































.DAILY COLONIST. Victoria. B C . Saturday. September 2 .1978 

in hoi hi.> i on sAiiK ♦ I lit houm rxm hi i 

TM6 2M 

•HISTORY r-Xfs j 

MAKERS" \W 

WMTTOMTS 

OPEN HOUSE 1 

SUN. 1-4 I 

2991 Qi/Appelle St. 

Tudor charmer - renovated and 
dacoratad. 2 bedr o o ms and base 
man! • gleaming hardwood floors 
View With B HukhHon 479-8429 
and 479-1467. 


1 - V 


JAMBS BAY 
$48,900 ^ 

Quiet ifraat etas* too vnoDoindfepd 
park 3 SR and 4 pea. up - Kftch- 
an DR and LT on main with 2 pea. 

- Immaculata home with full 
bamt. 

W. B. Hamming tan 592-4479. 

WATERFRONT 

20x30 INDOOR HEATED 
SWIMMING ROOl 
FAMILY HOME ON 
1.9 ACRES 

Yes, a real opportunity for some¬ 
one — na» revenue (or $400.00 
p«« month — Easy financing to 
right party—vendor will carry con¬ 
siderable paper. Home has been 
lompletetv renovated 4 bedrooms 

— many nice features about 135' 
waterfront in Sooke Harbour. Mar¬ 
velous view East Sooke and Olym¬ 
pics. This would be ideal tor com¬ 
mercial fisherman. Priced 
5125.000.00 for further Information 
call anytlma 305-9741 or Bob Gib¬ 
son 650-5153. 

OPEN ’HOUSE 

SAT., SUN. AND MON. 

2:00-5;00 P.M. 

859 DALKEITH 

Gracious new Traditional style 
hpme on approximately 1 acre of 
partially wooded land overlooking 
Ardmore Golf Course. Large liv¬ 
ing room with tiraolece, separate 
dining room, family size kitchen 
and large eating area. 3 good 
wed bedrooms end pert felly 
finished bedroom or crafteroom In 
full high cement basement plus 
huge family and games room with 
fireplace and a workshop. Tharg 

3 4-oca. baths (one enfcilte), 
laundry room, docks and patios, 
lots of storage space. Intercom 
throughout. Many exirae too nu¬ 
merous to mention. Double oarage 
with automatic door. A must to 
*«• **aa wanting privacy and 
a oulat living. A quality homa In a 
new subdivision with every con¬ 
venience and room for your own 
tennis or shuffle board courts and 
garden If desired. Price $135,000 
For further Information call 
or BOB GIBSON 554-5153 
or 456-3244 anytime. 

SBAVIBW — 
NEPTUNE — NEW 

This contemporary design features 
wood In a treed setting and ocean 
vtews ! t 2 n i T^ter BP (4-pc. an 
suite! LR and OR. Two addltionsl 
BR*. famHy room, 4-oce bath and 
utility down. Office space down at 
well V, this convenient location on 
55 acres. Aafctog 4114,500. 


AT $64,500 

This 4 bedroom 44 bath) Brent 
wood Bay horn# *t a M)*r buv. 
lovely finished rec. room end spe¬ 
cious entry hall, pastoral viaws 
from this and of a cul-de-sac fann 
ly home To view call Jean Hut¬ 
chinson 479-4429 and 479-1667 

QUIET LOCATION 
CLOSE IN 


v>li. homa of over l- 

with fireplace, auto oil heating, no 
basement but saoarate garage and 
a storsos shed Future potential in 
a 7000 sg. ft. lot. Price 839.900. Im¬ 
mediate occupancy. Wilfred Davis 
479-1467 or 654-UBJ. 


CALL 


* Bruce or Jean Hutchinson to dis¬ 
cuss these homes priced to self: 
—3 bedrooms • character • Portage 
Inlet. $53,500 


area - cute. 444,500. 


—2 bedro o ms - Tudor - basement - 
Gorge. 457,500. 


—2 bedrooms - duta A eery 
Marigold. 441.500. 


2400 sg. ft. 444,500. 

479-4429 AND 479-1467 

' J. H. Whlttome A Co. Ltd. 


BILL 


ARTER 572-3970 



PRIVACY— 

MO STOP 

No *tep 2-BR home on large fully 
fenced yard. Good LR with FP and 
feature cedar wall. Large kitchen 

XKfrSjsr- "* • «" d 

- McCAR 


BILL 


ART6R 997-3979 


Town & Country 

Sparkllnq 2 bedroom starter or 
retirement house. Everything up¬ 
dated. Laundry on main floor. 
Basement. 50x112 lot. Drive by 164 
Sims Must be sold. MLS. 

bull mccarter 592 »*> 


MAYFAIR REALTY 

Mayfair Centra 

386-2955 


NOW OPEN 
6 DAYS 

For I.C B.C . Real Estate 
and insurance 
WED.. TMURS, FRI. 

TO 9 P M 

AND ALL DAY SAT 
WE'RE HERE FOR YOU 

OPEN HOUSE 
SAT. 1:30-4:00 
3513 QUADRA ST. 

immaculate character home with 
seclusion. Older but renovated. 
Possible two family iiplnq.- w e a r - 
3000 sg. ft on 2 levels. 4 bed¬ 
rooms. 2 full baths. CTrqa living 
room with fireplace, formal din¬ 
ingroom, huge recreation area. 

- -Large carport wtth extra perklno. 
Mature shrubs assure seclusion. 
You owe it to vourseff to see this 
LOU BLOOMFIELD. 346 2955 or 
477-0432. 

OPEN HOUSE 
SAT. 1:30-4:00 
4017 Dawnview Cr. 

(Off Edgefow) 

This brand new 3 BR home has 
seen exoertly planned and constru¬ 
cted bv renutaWa builder. Meny 
extras to complement the attractive 
d»cor. Lovely kichert with eating 
area Ample dining room area. 2 
baths. Full basement can be eas¬ 
ily developed. Quiet street, close 

r . . $74,500 MLS. 

NS 346-7955 or 

_ WALL. 346-2951 

or 477-0544. 

OPEN HOUSE 
SUN. 1:30-4:00 
9573 Christine PI. 

Beautifully kept six year old split 
lever 3 or 4 bedroom, 2 bath home 
on large fenced lot. Very quiet art- 
de-sec with other fine homes. 
Vendor transferred. Realistically 
priced at $56,900. LEIGHTON 
NOBLE, 346-2955 or 3444275. Pager 
749, 

SOUTH 
OAK 'BAY 

A lovely older home with the char¬ 
acter and charm mat is so desira- 
bie 3 large bedrooms, guest size 
dining room, modernized 
bathroom. Beamed celling In living 
room, updated wiring and plumb¬ 
ing. Good roof. Full basement. 
Separate gerao* Love'y back 
verd All this tor to little. MLS 
346-2955 or 594-3447. 


NEW HOME 
$67,900 


i appliances 
CALL: 

JOHN ADDICOTT 


4505 Tanglewood 
Broadmead 

Exceptional privacy provided In 
large beautifully landscaped | 
corner lot. House design wraps 
around hidden petto 1351 eg. ft. of 
rancher, with two bdrms and dan 
Leaves tots of room for gracious 
living. MLS. Through listing sales¬ 
man only 

BLAKE CROTHERS 
*44-6454__ 652 2553 

~*SEABOA!|£r 
CONSTRUCTION 
OPEN HOUSE 
CENTRAL SAANICH 
Saturday and Sunday. Saof-2 ana 
3. 2:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. 

762* Sigmar Place 
7766 Scohon Place 

Pal Bay Hiqhwev to Mt. Newton X 
*t Wallace Drive and follow 


'iv devetooad. Quiet 

Gf OP OK PARSON ' 
594-3447. GEORGE W 


Buy direct from the builder. 

3 bedrooms, W.W Carpet. Tharme 
Windows. Many extras. 

652-1177 

STARTER 

James Bsv 3 bedrooms, fenced 
yard, remodelled inside; very low 
gown payment. Valuable town- 
»P* . w - Hurry! Only 

s aa-rfs T”*" "> vi **- 

" J TO* I ’ 

7 bedroom, honeymoon or 
retirement haven with 
SEPARATE STUDIO COTTAGE 
wp-tM. Ceage w#$rwav and shop- 
# T>ing 1 bik. $46,000 and financing 
assisted. No agents. 344-7507 


P. R. BROWN 

ANOtONtlTO. 

"Ths Peopis To See” 

OPPORTUNITY 

KNOCKS!! 

This 3 BR bungalow with In¬ 
tow suite was appraised at 
$65,500 and offers to that 
amount are invited. Near 
Perk-goiMhopoIng, and bue. 

MUST BE SOLDI 1044 Tilth 
eum 

MUST BE SOLDI I 

Try an offer: Call now for 
private Inspection and avoid 
regret. MLS 

sssi vmr ss 

COOK. Older 2 or 3 bedroom 
home with full basement. 
BONUS • extra bulidlna lot 
which you can hold or sail. All 
for only $57,0001. 

MAYFAIR TOLMIC. I bed- 


KTQ $57,0001 

VIC WEST (TWO) S or 4 bed¬ 
rooms Quiet streets, conven¬ 
ient to towh. -Take your pick 
st $50,000 and $52,900. 

OAVIO SCOTT 345-3439 


When you •» 
have fomething 
to sell, the eashett 
way to find 
a buyer U to 
speli it out 
In print! 

You do that 
by placing a 
Iow-or*t # 
Classified A 
in the newipaper, 
telling our 
readers what 
you have to sell. 
We'll help you 
Give us a call 
today, 
at 386-2121. 


Romantic Shawl 

589/ 


Ltf £uwu AIV lvcx£it 

So msatiie' loss it over your 
show Wets for i fashion highlight 1 

The pretty shell fan design 
attracts all eyes a hen you near 
this raceful shiwl Crochet in 2 
cotorc of fluffy synthetic yarn 
Pattern 589 directions, one sue 
for all 

$1 50 for each ptttern—cas* 
cheque or money order Aod 25c 
•or each pattern for tirsl-class mail 
and hanaiinQ. Send to Da<iy 
Coionisf Parern Dept., 

109 CrockfOffl Bhrd YSctfDor- 
ooQh Ontario, M1R5B4 Print 
plainly pattern numper, your 
name adore* 

NEW FOR 1979* NEEOUCRAFT 
CATALOG-Hesdrtds of beauti 
ful things to make 1 3 free 
patterns inside Send 754 

1 /9-QuicA/ls^f Transfers $1.50 
178-Patchwert Omits SI 50 
1274f|haM 's' Ostites $1.50 


12SCiafte 

125-Petal 


$1.50 
$1.50 

124-Grfts Omamtnb $1.50 
123-Strtch’n Patch Qurtti $1 A 
172 Stuff V Pwtt Qu»m $1 2S 
121-Ptltew SfeaihOm $1.50 
128OKMaN«drs0a $1.00 
HSfWmr Cmtot $1.00 
lit Caadiet with Square $1.00 
116 Nitty Fifty Omits $100 
115-Rfepfe Cischef $1.00 
llACampfete Afghans $1.00 
112-Pfiw Atshans .750 
111 Hairpin Crochet $1.00 
107-lMfant Sewing $1.00 
105-Instant Crochet $1.00 
01 15 QotNifer Today .750 
102-Museum Quilts .754 
lOlOuittCeMoctien 750 


Pretty Pair! 

Printed Pattern 

T» 




ZA I rOlXTRY HOMER 
nnd PROPERTYJR 

Privacy Yet 
Near Town 

INTERURBAN - 2.01 ACRE, 

hobby ranch with fenced paeturee. 
outbuildings, e gorgeous setting 
with tall trees. The home a 
rancher with 4 bdrms., 2 bathrms, 
rec. rm.. quality decor. 

WILKINSON — 1 acre of view 
property. low maintenance, the 
home Is completely renovated end 
added to, designed with character.. 
2 bdrms., spacious living rm. io 
monsterous sundeck to take in the 
view, plus finished rec, rm. 
METCH05IN — 2 acres across 
from ocean park, next to a 9 note 
golf course. A hobbv ranch, fenced 
pastures. 400 so ft. barn The 
home Is unlgge with guellty 4 
bdrms., spacious dining rm,. livtnu 
rm., MUt bar room, dbt garage 
plus so much more. 

306-3231 Bob Hahn 5911642 
BlirWonnacott 656-53)7 
Bloc k Brot. Re alty Ltd 

PANORAMIC VIEWS 
2 ACRES 
SECLUSION 

Situated on 2 acres of lawn and 
trees In Metchosin, a one year old 
contemporary 4 level split resi¬ 
dence of rich cedar, 4 large bed¬ 
rooms. 3 bathrooms, spacious liv¬ 
ing room, separate dining room 
and a magnificent 2 level kltcnen 
and adjoining family room with 
brick fireoioce. with s w eeping vai 
lev views. The kitchen has Jeme 
air. digital oven dishwasher, with 
separate laundry room. A master 
piece of plannlno. $97,000. All 
ulfers submitted. 

Res Ted Watford Office 
591-1420 472-1141 

Block Bros. Realty Ltd._ 

BRENTWOOD BAY 
EXTRA LOT' 

Juft ilka money in the bank, a 
homing tot fer future cooh can 
be obtained trogs this large 
orooertv but wfurs to eniov 
with this Immaculate solit 
leve l fam ily homa, near school 

bedrooms. 3 balhroom* 

•rue rec. Rm*0ta. 


COUNTRY HOMF.R 
and PRO PERTH 4 . * 


9130 

f r ' 1 6 u 

(llf TlTAhitom tH CjtfU, 

A petticoat ruffle peeps out 
beneath the ensp apron com - 
such a charming storybook look 
for today s girls Ruffles at nerk 
and wrists, too. Choose print 
or checks and solid tokx 
Printed Pattern 9130 Girts 
Sizes 6. 8. 10. 12. 14 Size 10 
dfess 2 yds. 60 . apron 1 
$1 50 for each pattern- canh 
r deque or money order Add 2bt 
for each pattern for first-class ma*i 
«"d handling Send to Dany 
Colonist Pdllern Dept . 

109 Crocked Bivct Scarbor 
ough. Ontario. M1R5B4. Print 
plainly pattern number, your 
name, addre* 

Pattern Dept. (Name of 
piper), Address 

Let’s bo practical-you get 
more for less $ when you sew* 
Send for new FAIL WINTER 
FASHIONS T&SIW CATALOG Has 
$150 coupon for frot pat 
tern of your choice 754 
107 Imfent Sewing Book $1.00 
106-Instant F«Mea look $1.00 
121 Patchwork Quits $1.50 
1244iffe O ma m i n ts $1.50 


attached oarage, werk- 


tleman* home. Aeklng only $09.W 
5,45,05 

HORSE COUNTRY' 

3.17 beautiful acres in delightful 
Deep Cove. Fiat oastureland with 
shady tree* make this ideal for 

1- orses or came. The 3-bedrm . 

2 - beth home has 2 old brick ftre 
r laces and 1750 SO ft. of comfort 
for you to emov. Call today and 

ANNETTE WALLS 65^091 

PEMBERTON. HOLMES LTD 
1000 Gover nment St., 34*0124 

executive: rancher 

5 ACRES 

In the country area of Hlghiard 
just 30 minutes to town, ar ex¬ 
ceptionally tint cadar »idlpq 
rancher ot ever J00C. v». ft. wit h 
double garage. Thlstfhenv teatured 
home has baam^p ceiling in LR 
and fam.lv fonm. large mast.r 
BR with dressing -room. 3 baths, 
family kitchen and dlsf»rt views 
o( Olympics Asking $45,000._ 
474-5561 BOB PAUL 
BLOCK BROS REALTY 


rJN 

ON THE BEACH 


Maqnificaht selection of COtfagfv 
Townhoues. apartment* offering 
fabulous views and within main 
tained estata grounds Abeoiute 
peace and quiet our first priority. 

For a viawing aooointment 

OCEAN VILLAGE 

_642-52$4_ 

GENTLEMAN FARM 

An exciting smafl farm with mod 
arn homa. barn and shed ptos 
outbuilding*. 9 62 acres, fenced, 
ideal tor horse* »nd smell farm¬ 
ing. Oh Yes, a swimming port 
Will taka trades on asking price 
0« $129,000 (HOUSE, ART . ETC. 
AS TRAOE). . .. 

IRV LIDSTONE 477-096? 

WAYNE BUTTERFIELD 343-0404 
344-44 B4 anyti me_ 

IJFE IN THE COUNTRY * 

Win be beautiful In this exceotlor 
si custom Ardmrre re«idance 2 
tultv ensuite betWoom* plus a h»t!v 
deveiooei tower levei with large 
dan, 2 way firaplare. quest Bed¬ 
room and bath. Probably one of 
♦he nicest homes In the area. Offer 
on M5S.U00. JEANNIE DEW- 
HURST 654-4940 (Res) Nora* 
Trusi 344-0001. __ 

' ‘ COUNTRY HOME 

features 3 bedroomar - ! bathroom*, 
tamlfv room, 2’» year* old 
teamad and vaulted cedar ceil¬ 
ings, stone heatilalor fireolace, 
covered balconies 2 cat garage. 
Located on acreage In the western 
community. Priced at $0,000 
under recent aooraisal, $12,000 
down, 642-5134 ._ * 

WANT PRIVACY? SECLUDED 
1 .-acre near Fiorenkcce Lake with 
new 1000 *q. ft. thr u bedreom 

sss? xet &&. Sts™ m 

474-2046 


COSY 

24 eers 


WARM CABIN, AMONGST 
J acres of oerk-like lend. Sauna 
nnd bam. In Metchoshi. $97,900 
firm 112-537-5443. Leave message 
JW-01U_ 

THREE BEDROOM &HAWNIGAN 
home on >A acre. 1 'y years old. 
1 MS'. Fireplace. Extras. $46,900 
743-4246. Message 346-7377. 


REDUCED! 

$87,500 

METCHOSIN!’ 


shoo. 

Separate shed, extra park 

'-^Seperfcta *h 
-Lge. sundeck with privacy. 

jSWlAHk «Mm 

P. R. BROWN 6 SONS_ 

TOTAL SBCLISION 
TREES, STREAM 
1.87 ACRES 

ITS DIFFERED 2 veer old rue- 
tom designed 4 BR residence wi'n 
unique fiorr plan, 1450 sa. H. fin¬ 
ished. Full bevement ready for 
development. Extensive use :f 
cedar, veutted ceiiir^s, separate 
dining room, spacious, tuHv equip 
pad kitchen, secluded vundeck 
overlooking ’ty sparkling trtut 
stream are lust aome of the d* 
lights wf this beautiful hideaway 
witnin 6 mite circle Ottered at 

SllTemaU 477-1441 Ted Waitom 
658-5794 594 1420 

_BLOCK BROS. REALTY LTD.^ 

DEEP GOVE AREA 
Ml-N RESTATE 

rou. R a?o.cl? 
beautiful 5-cedroom home end out 
bun dings, $162,000. ML 29330 Or 
vendor will retain l acre end sell 
tor $1324)00. A fantastic, buv. En¬ 
tire property immaculate. PAVED 
RDADsT* YEAR-ROUND CREEK, 
WATER PONDS, ORCHARO. 

J ARDEN, and much more For 
comoleto details, call: JIM PARK 
944-4075. pgr. 493 or residence 

MILDREO STAPELL*. 344-4075, 

°° r PEMBERTON. HOLMESLTO. 

1000 Government St.. 3M4124 ; 


SUNNY SAANICH 
ACREAGE 

Lovely older bazog-AltuAfeA-SC— i 
sloping 1.61 6cros otters palce 
ful living dose In. 3 bdrms end 
den. large living rm and asperate 
dining rm. Plus galley kitchen 
end spacious veranda tor latv 
afternoons. Great w or I shoe and 
trutt troOS. $49,500. MLS 34017. 

Cart JACK DAVIS 306-3494 (24 

hr*). 

CENTURY 21 Western Home* 

1037 Cioverdele Ave. 

306-3494 ( 2V Hrv)_• 

ARDMORE 
1 ACRE SEXX.USION 
SPLIT IXV'EL 
Sduetod on over on acre of beau- 
t tul'y teaed and lawned property, 
a 3 bedroom home with e 4th bed¬ 
room and Rl. racraatton room on 
the tower level. 2 bathrooms 
Large kitchen with adjoining din 
ing room. Horse paddock and stall. 

A tew minutes walk to the beecn 

OfUcf" 5 ”fS Watford Res 

477-1041 594-1420 

B l ock Brea, notify Ltd. 

SHAWN IGAN 
AREA 

Pretentious newer large Tudor 
home on nice clper acre. Reany 
soactous sunken living room with 
feature fireplace. Big dining room. 

3 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms. Extra 
bedroom end massive family room 
with brick F.P. Fulte fenced for 
horses etc. Two still berr with 
hay toft. Gloriously a country^ger 


Leva to tna tree* away aft 
the road to this contemporary 
cedar borne with btq rooms 
end deep windows that let tne 
sun shine in but so private 
that no drapes are needed. 
Would suit either u couple or_ 
a fanrrtlv with I bRs on the 
main and 1 down, big main 
bathroom with sunken tub and 
sap. shower, 2nd bathroom 
down. Floor to catling old 
brick PP In living and family 
room*, sop ground level rec 
with long bar and sliding gto^s 
doors to lawn area. Efficient 
electric lorred air heat Saga 
rata double garage — work 
shop plug extra single oarage 
M you're liking tor a home in 
the country phone today! The 
price ts right! ^ 

Jo Lennox 47BS63 

J*-a27S Pager T69 

Marilyn Moore S2-4015 

Capital City Realty Ud. 

344-7557 

SH’.KINGHAM PT. 

Sign on Woodheven. Quality, com¬ 
fort and beauty in toil 1 yr old 3 
bedrm. home. Charming to-line Hv 
ing and dining rm. with open 
views. Brick FP end Inviting 
toyer. Futtv dev. lower level has 
tarn. rm. with FP, 1 or 2 bdrms. 
and second 4 pc bethrm w-W 
carpets thru out — oil heet — 
comm, water. On 1 ac. treed with 
edj. acre avail. Worth a look and 
Offers to $77,500. ML Mary 
McGuire 479-1667 anytime. 

J. H. Whlttome t Co .. Ltd. 

1.57 ACRES 

Central Saanich 1906 Hovey 
Rd. Ranch style homa wiht 
snake roof, 2 or 3 BRs, Rec . 
room. DR. LR with fireplace. 
Large workshop, new green 
house with another started. Po¬ 
tential business in fucies and 
qtraniums. Beautiful trees on 
beck Of the property. Asking 
$92,000. 

ROY ANDER50N 477-5057 
p R. 3rown and Sons 345-3435 


SUBDIVTD A BLE 
ACREAGE! 

Royal Oak may soon be the 
hot spot development tree of 
victoria. Why wait. 

Call Welly or Adelina 477-7766 
or 477-4562 of Capttal City 
Really Ltd. 344-7557. 


MILL BAY — 4 BEDROOM, 2.600 
sq. ft., cedar ranch house, barn. 2 
aero* $49,500. 7434675 

GORDON HOLME LTEL ’ 

SIDNEY-SAANICH PENINSULA 
656 1154 2444 Beacon Ave 


r* WATER FRO NT 

PBOPEBTli:* 

ANCHOR 

YOUR GOAT 

A SUPERB WATERFRONT COft- 

'MNUM' cxpffiftE. *5 
ected oav. Good SALMON PISH¬ 
ING. Over TWO ACRES of beauty 
— rose garden, fruit trees, vegeta¬ 
ble garden, many species of trees. 
Fence your daughter's PONY or 
HORSE. OnIV 30 minute* to Victo¬ 
ria, 7 minutes to terries, airport 
end Stonay. MLS. Ottered at 
572 5 x2»^T 0 view this RARE 
PROPERTY, please call: 

M 5TAPELL1 344-6075, pgr. 506 
JIM PARK 344-4075, pgr 493 


23B W Aim FRONT 

PROPtfRTir.s 

ON THE BEACH 
CORDOVA BAY 
$109,000 

This homa ts a must to vltw for 
thosa who appreciate the ocean, 
the send end the sea breast it 
hM 2 bdrms on the main, L.R 
with F.P.. D R and kitchen over 
looking the ocean. Laroe family 
room with franklin F.P. down and 
3rd bdrm, driven garage and hot 
water haal For appointment to 
view call SHANE BEFURT 
3464164 or 279-0010 

TEN MILE POINT 
WATERFRONT LOT 
$79,900 

You can buy as is or vendor will 
build to tuit. Property has a pan 
oramlc view of me strait and 
islands A on* time opportunity te 
have your dreams come true. Fcr 
view call SHANE BEFURT. 
3464164 or 479-0010 CASTLE PRO 
PER T IES. ‘ _ ' 

PROSPECT LAKE 
$71,500 

Waterfront property with 70 ft. 
frontage, tastefully lendscaped 
. oncrete wall at water edge, smalt 
dock, plus naaf stucco housa with 
one BR and bathroom on mam 
and second BR 2 pee. bathroom 
down. This I* an all vear home 
with auto oil beat tog, flnaplace 
new hot water tank, two water 
systems. Exclusive. Wilfrad Davis, 
479-1667 or 6&4-S442. 

j. H Whittam# A Co. Ltd. 

WANTED 

Character borne with 2 or 3 bed 
room*. Marigoid-Gorga area up to 
$60,000. 

Starter home 2 bedroom with base 
ment preferred any good area uo 
to $50,000. If you, have # home 
which mkv be suitable for these 
prospective purchasers pleas* call 
FREDDY STARKE M+4164 o 
279-3164 CASTLE PROPERTIES. 

CONDOMINIUM* 

$21,900 

Reduced again to this unbeat¬ 
able pr»T (waa W$.900L 
Ownar tranafarrad. 1-BR, 2nd 
level, west side In Windsor 
Manor. Attractive bldg., con¬ 
crete floors, elevator, rec 
room, Heet Included. This to a 
"one only" that I know of for 
the price. 

MORE SPACE 

Vary attractive 2-BR. lVr bath, 
laroe kit (over 15') in-lina LR- 
DR (24') Automatic garage 
door. Gif Lampson. Reduced to 
$37,900. Try your offer! 

ORCHARD 

HOUSE 

Whet a View! nth floor South 
side. Clean 1-BR. oaraoe park 
ng swimming pool, etc. Ask¬ 
ing $37,900. 

p£y ANDERSON 477-J057 
“. R. Brown and Sons 345-3435 


t&« condomimlmr 


•AW CONDOMl.NltM« 


JIM PARK 344-4075, pgr 493 
PEMBERTON. HOLMES LTD. 
lOOO Govemmant St., 344-4124 

MULThUSE LOT 

Vacant waterfront lot. over 100 ft. 
frontage that provides 
1 Recreaiion us* for tisning. 
scuba diving, boating, swim 

ming. 


3 Sit* for retirement horn* over 
looking Saanich Inlet with so 
oerb views. Vendor is offering 
excellent terms on price of 
i4ij£t ' 

Wilfred Davis. 479-1667 or 


GONZALES BAY 

— CONTEMPORARY OP = N DE¬ 
SIGN 

— 4 b.r 

— DEN 

— RECREATION ROOM 

— SKYLIGHTS, BEAMS. FEA 
TURE WINDOWS 

— OUTSTANDING VIEWS 

— MUST BE VIEWED 

346 2111 595-1507 

MONTREAL TRUBT CO. 

WATERFRONT 

$77,900 

Baautiful sunnv south exposure 
waterfront on Blue Lagoon over¬ 
looking the see. 2’s vrv, 4 bdrm. 
main. ensutie, full basament 
Loads of decks, attractive sunken 
hvingroom. Owner transferred, 
must be sold ... Call today 
346-2111 DON BECKNER 344-5264 
MONTREAL TRUfT CCOMPANY 
Pagar Tit 

REDUCED TO 
$39,500 

Lovely traed and level 1.0? ecres 
Water front, over 200 feet beach 
♦rontage on city water, excailens 
home sit*. For more into, phone 
FREODY STARKE 346-6164, or 
279-3466. or LARRY J. QUAGLIOT 
Tl at 477-7944. CASTl! PROPER 
TIES. _ 

PRIVATE SALE 

Magnificent log home on 10 seclud¬ 
ed ecres, 460' frootaoe overlooking 
Juan de Fuca Straits. 10 mile* 
west ot Sooke. Small orchard, 
careta ke r 4 * co tta ge, chi ld ren's | 
cabin, perfect for writers, artists 
or retirees. Ownar moving, will ' 
sell tor $155,000. far below real-. 
tor s tespralsals. Save $10,000 com 
mission. Reply to Victoria Press 
B ox 35. _ 

IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 

1665 OAK BAY AVE. 

Wembley Manor 

Choice location, 2 bedrooms 
qround floor, near Jubllaa. bus. 
rec. centre.' shop*. Quality con¬ 
structed bldg, pleasant landscap¬ 
ing, GE appliances, l’s lux. batns, 
quality flttinos, Willard room, 
workshop. $45,000. OPEN HOUSE. 
Sat., Sun. 2-6. To vlaw S94-2K6. 

31*9794 _ 

UNDER S29.900 . » 

— leeai tor the single parent 
3-bedroom tamily condominium 

--Walk to arena, shopping plaza 
—Consider ell trades of car. recre- : 
ation vahicle. traMar mortgaga , 
or other property 
C esh or lower down payment 
-Ask about the $2,500 orant. 

Haltn or Ted Bowden, 477-7754 
Bowden Realty Ltd. 344-6524 

164 FT. 

WATERFRONT 

^RES ON FLORENCE . 
‘ffars on *35,000. Vendor I 
- offers on $35,000. Vendor 

_ J. H. WWItome an d Co. Lt d. 

RETIRE b's $ 4 2 .7 S 0 a 

-Naar Senior Activity centre 

— immaculate 2-bedroom suit* 

— Raised slate hearth fireplace 
Huge glaesed-ln sunporch 

—insult* washer and dryer 
—$25 maintenance, $15 net taxes. 

Call Helen or Ted. 477-7750 
Bowdan Realty Ltd, JBM484 

WEST BAY EJOytteALT WATER- ! 
front- 4gr, #q**kU*( in land, ap 
or ox iOOO sq. ft. Older house on 
property, needs uo-datlng. All of- I 
tert considered. Asking $32,500. I 
DEL BECKNER 


1.55 ACRE 

LAKE. Off Of 
lake, offers 


SAANICH PENINSULA 
PROPERTIES LTD. 

2254 Beacon Ave . Sidney 454 4000 


GONZALESBAY 
One-bedroom cottage with full 
basament, oil heat, llvlngroom 
with flrepfeo*. dlntoq art#, large 
flatted-in porch. 679JM.OO. _ 
WCBU_ 9W-4464 

COWICHAN LAKE, NORTH ARM, 
genuine too cabin on trim* treed 
lot. Sweeping views, safe gravel 
beechet. electricity, water and 
telephone. Off paved highway, of- 
fertd at, $34,900^94-3169. _ 

Shownigon Manor 

Lots on Shawnigan Lake. See 
under tot* (or salt. For further db> 
t arts 595 -6241._ 

2 MILES NOtiR OF BRENT- 

wood. 90' wet^tront 475.000 
Phone 652-4855 


MOVE RIGHT IN 
QUALITY CONDO 

Attractive eduir oriented building 
<w Irma St. featuring spacious LR 
with raised hearth fireplace. Din¬ 
ing area, galley kitchen, on* 
bedrm., plus eoctosd balcony for 
a den or guest room, 4 appliances. 
Private laundry room Priced to 
sell at $32,000. Exclusive with 
ffC PEARCE 3M-J80a 

_OT 3464771 (anytime) 

CONDOS AND TOWN- 
HOUSES 

302 1122 ESQUIMALT RD — Im¬ 

maculate 3 bdrm. family aot 
Quality kitchen appliance* 
Low down payment. Asking 
$27,300. 

22 2391 TORQUAY — Immacu¬ 

late 3 Bdrm. townhoue*. Archi 
feet designed small complex 
End unit. Thermopan* win¬ 
dows, rec. room, double car¬ 
port. Asking $56,000. 

BILL McCARTER 992 3970 

HENOERSON REALTY LTD. 
_ 345-9741 

EXECUTIVE CONDO 
Professionally decorated. this 
roomy, deluxe condominium has 
many great features that simply 
radiate greclou* living. Large, 
bright, daylight kitchen w.th ell 
new appllences, stone f replace In 
the roomy living end dining are*. 
Special interest Is the great har¬ 
bour view. Maintenance te* In¬ 
cludes neat, hot water, itorking 
surance, etc. For details end to 
view phone D. Heio Burn* 

Block Bros. Realty Lfd_ 
4 77-7441 _ <77-7079 

ON THE PARK 

2 bedroom corner suit* to a lovely 
block to Victoria's flnatt loco*'®?’- 
Looking out to the lawn bowling In 
Bacon Hill Park, this speooue 
residence feature* 1V» baths, 
fridge and stove, sun drapes and 
excellent wall to wail throughout 
Vary few units become available 
bar# - with shop©mg iu*t HWfto 
me corner *b# park and Della* 
Rd. SO 

35,5-7163 MICHAEL BUR* 3d4-«IS 
davld burr tfd. _ 

FAIRCLIFFE 
2 BDRIAAS. 

Aou'nvnu oositk* 

Olympic Mtns and Straits. Extra 
roomy deck off llvlngroom provkF 
mo area for flowers and small 
scrub*. Appliance* and drape* to- 
cludad to price ot $47,900. MLS 

tel 1 ?!! ! C. D. BttCKNER 477-4994 

^ONLY $43,900, 

ii has everything, It's immaculate 

3 beftpoma. basament, tastefully 
tiscorafed, only 4 veers old. Pretty 
flower garden and private petto 
i.awned grounds, heated swimming 
pool On* of the nicest townhousas 

n one of the nicest townnous# 
locations. MLS. Call Tom Evans 
657 2620, 346-7545. Island Homes 
Lid. __ , 

PARK PLACE 

7605 WINDSOR ROAD 
Available Seat. 1st. Corner 3 bad 
suit* with saa view. 2 patios, deco¬ 
rates to suit. All facilities includ¬ 
ed. indoor pool, saunas, etc. efc. 
view by appointment onto 
$125,000. Phon# 594-2411 or am. 


Before 

You Buy Any 
CONDOMINIUM 

LOOK 

CHATEAU 

JUBILEE 


1610 JUBILEE 

(OFF OAK BAY AVE,) 

1. 2, AND 3 
BEDROOM UNITS 
Detux# Features sueh as: 
-Up te 1322 sq. ft 
--Firopplacas to »m# units 
- Fully secured underground 
parking 
-Appliances 
-OAK BAY AREA 
QUALIFIES tor lOte C.C.Ai 


71/2% 


ft OFF SELLING PRICE 


GR^ENBANK DESIGNS LTD. 


FURNISHED STUDIO, SUPER 
ocean view, sauna pool, covered 

ufl'•king, etc. Designed to give sec __ 

•rat* sleeping area A must see | 3:30 P.M. WEEKI 

tor fhe single wishing walking dit 
•anc* to downtown, Perliement 


Buildings and park. $26,300 In 
eludes fumishlnos good term* To 
view phone 112-743-2643. 

BEACON HILL PARK 

Immaculate 1 bdrm. suit* over¬ 
took mg pleasant garden are*. 
Quiet, well managed and beau¬ 
tifully appointed building has sau¬ 
nas, swirl poo I, games room, etc. 
MLS. 428,900. JUNE HOUGHTON 
4 7MHS, National Truer, 395-212 1. 

BV dWNER. OVER 1000 SO. FT. 
with unobstructed 160-dtgrae view 
of outer harbor, strait and moon- 
tains, from a secluded sundeck 
and two bedrooms, l»* baths, 
large kitchen, dishwasher. $47,500 
View bv appointment only. 305-7354 
after 3:30. _ 4 _ 

GOOD ACCOMMODATION 
I JOW DOWN PAYMENT 
Strata titla duplex unit, 3 BR's. 
baths, Terg* fenced lot. A 
super buv at $377500. BILL 
MCCARTER, 592-3970. MU. 


Open Daily 
10 a m. - 8 p r 

SALES OFFICE 


STADACONA CENTRE 
(Oak Bay Junction) 
LUXURY 
ONE BEDROOM 
* WITH FIREPLACE 
ASKING $46,900 
Less than on* year old. FACES 
WEST on to quiet Stedacona Ave 
nue. in same building as INDOOR 
HEATEO SWIMMING POOL, 
sauna, swlrlpool and changing 
rooms; spacious beautifully ap¬ 
pointed Tudor lounge; hobby and 
crafts room; Tudor library wilts 
Picture win daw looking out on 
oool; chfmptonafupglx* billiard 
tabl*. UNDERGROUND PARKING 
spec* included. Superb treed GAR¬ 
DEN COURTS with fountains 
NEIGHBOURHOOD SHOPPING 
y.ithout leaving its# complex. As 
these units sold so quickly at the 
end of last year, this is an ex¬ 
cellent opportunity tor those who 
mused out, as wall as tor people 
looking tor something special in 
this price rang*. Call ROBERT 
VOUNG 386-4275 I Pager 421) or 
343-949$ (res.) or 383-4124 anytime 
Park Pacific Investments Ltd. 


FOUR ACRES 

HILLTOP LAND 

OFFERING 

Fantastic Views 

With Luxury Features such as: 

—Circulating ft replaces 
-Specious suites, largo balconies 
—Hot pool end saun# 

—Ensulte washer end dryer 
f tell (ties 

-Underground parking 
—Guggt rooms 

PROM 153,900 


3060 Crifcr Hill I 

At McKenzie 


3170 IRMA 
STE. 406 

PRl.-SAT 1 30-3 34 

ideal tor th* retired) Hemal.k* at¬ 
mosphere with your own R.H. brick 
F P. - Lge. DR-laundry room with 
W-D. Compact kit v.ith appliances 

$i£C-0 ** 

B. Brown. C. Atkina 479-1667 
_J. H. Whlttome 1 C* . Ltd. 

EARLY OCCUPANCY 
this is one of the best buys *n 
today's market. Top Boor corner 
7-BR condominium. Included are 
♦rost tree (ridge, continuous clean 
rang*, gerburatcr. Top quality 
wall-to-wall. Adult oriented. Rea¬ 
sonable assessment. Reduced from 
$34,900 to S36.9C0. Afill consider all 
attars. To view cali; 

543-0516 DEL HOEGI 346-7521 
• OORMAN INVESTMENT CO 
LTD. 

412 FORT ST. 


THE ' 
NEWPORT ! 
BEACH 


Only a tow yards to Oak Bay's 
moat exclusive waterfront on 
Beech Drive overlooking tho Oak 
Bay Marina. Spacious luxury. $»o 
bedrooms, two full bathroom 
apartment homes built with all th# 
extra daeign teeturgs and metlcu 
loOs craftsmanship that typify an 
of Pork Pacific's mony fin# prot- 


2930 COOK ST 

Luxury t BR sulfas. Raaliy tops to 
design and aattlng. Appointments 
364-40IX 346-3416, Sf-tsTO 

j Waterfront 
Living 
$39,900 

The see the harbour, tho walk¬ 
ways and the pork art at your 
doorstep frem this on* BR around 
door corner unit on Dellas Rd 
Modern kitchen, lge. to line LR 
X DR. A mow storage. Small bldg. 
Adult oriented. Reduced to $31,900. 
MLS 34106 

THE SAVOY 

SPACIOUS CORNER SUITk, SEV- 

KITCHEN WITH GARBURATOR. 
THS LARGE BALCONIES HAVE 
SLIDING DOORS. VIEW OF CITY 
AND WATER FROM THIS SUITE. 
PLEASE PHONE 594-1514 or 
-94-3221 BETWEEN 0:30 A.M. and 
..EEKDAYS. 


OAK BAY VILLAGE 

2 bedroom, 2 storey town house. 
Fireolace. Garage. Small pat al¬ 
lowed. Exclusive at 45X400. 
JEANNIE DEWMURST 654-6940 ar 
Royal Truat IMW_ 

INNER HARBOUR VIEW 
Spacious luxury 2-badroom con- 

^ n,U dlnlne 2 ‘"kiteban" V ‘to 

room, dining roomy wTenon# in* 

suite laundry, balcony. 592-943B. 


OWNER FAIRFIELO 
Deluxe beautifully appointed 2-bed¬ 
room 2 full baths. Walking dis¬ 
tance to beach, park, town, imme¬ 
diate occupancy. 446,500. 342-3941 


CLOSING OUT SAI 2E 

JOFFRE MANOR 
1121 ESQUIMALT ROAD 
em.shn to fitJM 
Only 3 left so cell to any day ex¬ 
cept Sunday 1:» to 4:00 p.m. pnd 
dte:uea trade* or financing if de¬ 
sired with CLARE BROCK or 
phono 994 3321 or 992-2173 tnytimo. 

JACK MEARS 

OAK BAY REALTY LTD. 

SPENCER CASTLE 
$65,500 

. 2 bedrooms, 2 bathroom unit 3rd 
floor phase I. includes washer 
dryer, range, fridge, dishwasher 
serburator, sundrapes. w.w. car 
petlng and a most unique amenity 
Dockage. Call ownar to view. 
344-7035. _ 

PARK PLACE 

M6 WINDSOR OAK RAY 
unique up down suite, top floor. 3 
bed. end den, wet bor, all facto 
tie*, indoor pool, swirl, sauna, 
steam, showers, roof real garden. 
Underground perking. View by 
apt- only. Phono 994-2411 or 

OREEtfCUyrfgtlGNt LTP . 

BY OWNElf, OVERLOOKING 

Beacon Hill Pork, over lWlsq. ft., 
sundeck, 2 twin bedroom* with 
double closets, cm lured marble 
bathrooms, stone flraploco, seven 
appliances Including wether and 
dryer, In doyllohf kitchen with eat- 
f- Wto&wgd dining room, 
beautiful carpeted throughout, sun 
cwrtetoe a«4 over drepee Included. 
$73.500 . 344-5443. 

2 BEDROOMS 
$27,900 


ect*. Half of thee* exceptional lux 
ury apartment homos hove told to 
tho post tew weeks, somewhat of a 
record considering the price range 
end currenl market conditions 
Tr>«r«*Lll probably never b* an¬ 
otherBWding of this quality, in a 
similar location, aver to be crest 
rd again to Victoria. Don't miss 
this fabulous opportunity to pur 
chase happlntts and peace of 
mind tor the rest of vour Iff* know 
inq you will have an Investment 
similar to a .valuable origin* 
painting or a an* of a kind art 
place. 

Priced from $110,000.00 
Look for the claKic blue canopy at 
1375 Newport Avenue. Call no a tor 
appointment to view — 596-4224 
(between 12:00 and 6:00 p.m.) or 
383-4124 twenty-tour hours. AnoUur 
quality development from Perk 
Pacific Apartments Ltd 


New Listing— 
University Area 
1 Bedrm.— 

Like ‘New 

762 sq. ft. of top quality accomme 
detion Not another like it. as a 
master craftsman has personalized 
this suite In tudor style. Large 
bedrm with * big closet. Quiet 
with all con vdn tenets and go 
verned bv an excellent counc 1 
$55,900 Firm. 

Fairfield 

2 Bedrm. Deluxe 

Corner ground tevel suite with gar 
den out'ook patio In on# o' th* 
fmest condominiums in the area 
not th* usual Plato condo. Attrar 
tlv# brick FP, hot water heatmg 
A spacious lovely home 554.00C 
BETTY SHEPHERD 
3U-5464 Pager 704 

(cmtZQL 

REALTY LTD 

M Baslio* Sq. Bog. 3KM151 

Stadacona Centre 
!$69,900 

A N’wy lovely ane bedroom 
penthouse has become avail¬ 
able in one of the newest 
projects by Park Pacific 
Private roof-top garden 
patio, beautifully furnished 
Price includes all appliances 
and furniture. Swirl and 
■wim pools, aauna. lounge 
and billiard room. u-g. park- 
| ing. Investor* note Quali¬ 
fies for C.C.A. 

To vi#ur rail Mike Ruddy 
65h-4U89. .188-6275. pager ft! 

Park Paoific Inv. Ltd. 

383-4124 

PSST' 

Wanna BuyaCondo' > 

Tfus on* bedroom end den con¬ 
dominium is in immaculate condi 
t.on. Its to a complex which hes * 
an enclosed heated swimming pool 
*ith access to outside sun patio 
Other leisure facilities include a 
hydro tberaoy pool, whirlpool ano 
sauna and saoarate change rooms 
billiard and games room with 
championship 4'xl2' antique t>t: 
hard table, 2 regulation tenm« 
courts workshop with individual 
storage for your tools. Tudor h 
brary for quiet reading. Tftis unit 
nas a qulat outlook facing south 
Frost-tree fridge self-deanmo 
rang# and dishwasher are includes 
in th* asking price of $37,750 
Excl. 

LORNE D^YLE 479 989a 


CANADA TRUST 


595-5131 


WHY RENT? 

$450 DOWN 
$220 P.I.T 

Vary low monthly payments witn 
Proyinciai and Federal subildies 
Low Income qualifications 

1 Bedroom $28 *>0 

2 Bedrooms $34,740 

Deluxe Frost Fra* Hotpelnt Re 
(r.gerators and soft Clean np 
Range* Included. Legal fees tor Is* 
Mortgage and Dead h * 


ar 

Ooen Weekdays 9-12 and 1-4 » 

Sat. and Sundays 1-4 P.M. 

830 Esquimalt Rd 

Byron Price 4 Associates Ltd 
345-2454 

AtT870 

McKenzie Ave 
1 Bedrm.—Like New 

Se close to the UnlvertlfV this te# 
just perfect tor student, professc- » 
or career person. A living, rm 
s.*mx«,tm with roomy dining In 
line and nice balcony The bedm-, 
is lge with big closet*. It's quiet 
decorated in qood test*, with af 
conveniences. A normonlous plea? 
ant to be to Condominium that is 
governed bv an astute counc< 
Assessment is only 439.26. Asking 
$34,944. veu tnouid see this 
GRAY LOREN*rN 
344-5464 P*qer 729 
LORENZEN REALTY LTD 




? BDRM. TOP FLOOR, DELUXF Vacant and reedy to m 
unit, near K-Mart. $36,500. ROB I Try your offer. Must be i 
ANGUS 452-257* tor National Truet 1 315-7721 CLIFF SALMOND 

995-2121. I GARDNER FALTY L 


_ tn-’sae 

kYy ltd. 


RETIRED? 

RETIRING? 

Privote Beach 

Boat moorage at your back door 
Magnificent views of the Herbouny 
Excellent choics of various arch. 
tactural dasigna. . 

OCEAN VILLAGE 

642-5254 

F or a vi ewing a ppo int ma rt 

NEW LISTING" 

And just 445.500 for this tootins 
7-bdrm condo. Vary nice buiMto* 
has elevator. Swirl pool; gam** 
room. Adult oriented. Sorry n* 
pets. Own laundry room in vour 
tuit*. Nice carpets; lots e 
storage. Sliding doors to 2 tun 
decks. See it now. LOUISE WIL 
TERMUTH 477-6307 or Castle Pro 
parties Ltd. 3IA4164 .__ 

PARKPLACE 


bad. with _ . ..__.... . 

oatiot. Indoor pool, sauna, *t#*m 
rooms. Roof real garden. Con 
trolled entrance. View bv appoint 
ment only. Phone 594-3411 #r 
3654991 an*, ter 
OREENBANK DESIGNS LTD 

CEDAR VILLAGE 
BARGAIN! $49,500 

Unique, bright attrectlv# town- 
house close to all convenience*. 
Spec lout thru-out. Excellent out¬ 
look front end rear. 3 large BR-, 
rec room, storage and laundry 
room. Separate DR, sate family 

38* 6254 388 4966 

CEDRIC STEELE RLTY. LTD 

422.454 - ONE-BEDROOM CON 
dominium, partly furnished, color 

SPACIOUS STUDIO SUITE, CNF 
bedroom on* storage room, leras 
living room, belconv, kitchenette, 
**tv terms 346-1610 
































































































































DAILY COLONIST, Victoria. B.L\ Saturday, Seiiteiirtwi' 2. IHiB 


f ESI OONDOMnm »l* 

JACK MEARS 
OAK BAY REALTY im 


12M TOWNHOl’SF.S 



I' ARKSDDE PLACE 
-BEDRM OONDO 
$24,500 


SEA HAVEN 
Townhouses 

897 Admirals 

jITia.se U is ready tor sale. 

23 Additional Townhouses 
{arc nearing completion and! 

' as all coata are now known, Ltd. 
i Pa^s Developments have 
tjecn able to reduce all an¬ 
ticipated sale prices to a 
point that you will find moat 
attractive 


tAB TUfTNltOtfUM 

CLOSETO BEACH 
$47,900 

Eniov the oood Mt* and all the 
beneht* of Townhouta living In a 
quiet 8 -unit comptex and only *14 
oar montn assessment Pnvai# 
courtyard, as new. 2 badrms. and 
dan. soaclous llv, and,din. rm„ 
sharp kitchen lots of storage As 
litti* as $2, tOO down. Ph. Morris 
Lund, 386-2$!$, Victoria Realty 


1171 I JOT* FOR SALK 


BROADMEAD 


283 (« YRAfiLS FOK SALE. 
RENT OR WANTED 




LOTS FOR HALE 


I/m FOR MLB 


Raikftidfic 


WE HAVE IT ALL 


>m and _... - 

_ kitchen with aopii 

ances Utility . and storage 

^Ind^WakiST^fS i Oimpare the location! ODm-i^^ 

SPey « ■ ,,are th * 

- ithe price! If v^i are con- mb HOL’hlh WANTED 


4,300 Please call 
Hi LEY at swim 
' tice) 59B -3371.. 

S AANICH WEST 
CQNDO - $28,900 I 


WANTED TO RENT IN VICTO- Sunny saaxlews. maadows. onv*te 
ria area, oaraqa-barn soace for 27' lanes, rocky outcroos, tread seciu 
boat ’•forage. s9*-6334 1 sion. quail pheasant and mere if 

you've been looking for that spe 
WANTED OARAGE. PREFERA. Cl a, soot 'or your new custom rest- 
bly with power. 3*34114 after 5 pon:e. visit us at Broadmead, a 

Compare, P- m - ___ . r . , community of quality homes. 

created wlih cart to preserve and 
compliment its unique natural In a class by itself, 


Proudly Presents 

DEAN 

PARK 

ESTATES 



L P ISLAND 
PROPERTIES 


"Paopla Helping people" 

ARDMORE 

I Laval, tread lot with 281 feat front¬ 
age on a black-topped road. 
$34,600. JOE RICKARD 636-1620 or 
303-1771 (anytime). 

DEE# COVE LOT 
I Sea glimpse. Water installed. 
'Owner: 477-0*23. 


Prefer a New Home*! 

Thera era two new under construe 
lion in Shewnigan Beach Estates 
Both have Lake views and are 
c lose to the beach. $34,900 and 
$ 44,(00 Buv now and select your 
own color schomo. 

BUILDING LOTS 

In snawmqan Beach Estates easy ; 
walk to beach. Asking only $11,900. 
in satellite Park One of the finest 
seaylew areas on the Island. Twd 
lots $19,300 and $24,00 | 

1.04 (oval acres on water and i 
sewer in Duncan araa. Has good 1 
2 bdrm home with excellent gar 
Subdivide Mo. 



IN MKMORIAM 

In Memorium 

'XuSmPVM the lat * Anka Anna Miller 


Courtenay. B.C. 


ACRES. DUNCAN AREA.! 740-0381 Volario'Strttch 743 410*1 

\waa*jifl;*.. 1 --M • 


Go od soil, 

I one’acre 


2,900 3884876 


J. H. Whittomo and Co. Ltd. 


^..... . _ , , ■ _ . , -__ Wjp mis faauious 

sidering the purchase of a TO BUY i beauty. development consists of tolly sor- ^ 6 5 * 4 i* 2 . 

._ . * . . ... I____i v eed lots with a minimum area - 

Townhouse we tWnk you II v / kao . / -. \/i,r\A/C h • - 100 -foat wide lots ore not the of U .000 so. ft. ranging In price 373 PROPERTY FOR RA1JS 

Looking for a comfortable ^ e ^ excellent OLYMP CVIbWb exception in Broadmead ... th*l s from $32,000 to $44,000. in a beauti-* ^ 

2 -bedroom condominium? Two ulLi>e /-a n rvDM iimC* 1 our average lot lira .. . ful natural salting - some with 

bedrooms, living room and din- value. ! NO GARDEN I'NG’ I , pinoramic views of the Gulf la- 

ISWSK* Many, of the new * ,#M- * 

water, Perking qnd_POOi. Ask ; I have interesting Seaviewa of ‘ G SlnlXa room.’ Ample ' 10 minutes from city contra Located in North Saanich, on the 


ANDERSON - Fred ot Dunfan. 

B.C . formerly from Scotland, 
passed awav peacefullv at Royal 
Jubilee Hospital on Au ' 

1(78. Ho was 43 veers of_... 

is survived by his loving wife. 

SSJSSJ fi£? in remembrance ^ >-„■ 

Jro « EtiSTMr*3n. n C ° “ V C r 

person was a member of the Coach Lines Bus and truck 

Royei Canadian Leq»on (Duncan; , , . ^ i c i nn j u „h. 

Branch) and he was also areally .Accident on me island n.-,n 
involved with squadron 744 of v.’ay near Nanaimo Septtm- 
tbe Air Cadets. He was am-; ’ . rT _ 

ploved at B.C.F.P. lor the past. her 3rd, 137T. . __ 


| Bay eras, $13^900. I 95 - 4 M 1 Modern waterfront rev I or sanq v 

w .ACRE, ARDMORE. TREED. ^"^'jy^hStdressMa S**- ^ f lo'e.nTat'st! j husband Anton (Tony). *ons 

tn th. ^ ^ P-^Jviiie^prbK I B T^i^Sf? g r 52f3iy I Josef* W.. North Bun tabV 


price $26,900 

_ WHILEY 

, or (office) 598-3321. 

OAK BAY 


HAROL*D 


TWO 10 ACRE VIEW PROPER- 
ties. Darklike, wall timberad. 
Beautiful building sifts. Owner 
478-4320 . 


at 5W-2798 Esquimalt Harbor. So select p*rkkn 
\-ours now. Come see us, 


QUIET LOCATION 
GLOSE JO BEACH 

Lovely 1-bedroom end den 
suite jn a steel end concrete 
. building on e oulet shady 
street 1 block from Beach 
Drive. Enjoy Recess to the 
Promenade without the 
through traffic. Living room 
opens onto a spacious patio sit- 
walad on beautifully lend 
scaped property Larqe kitchen 
nas 3 major appliances includ- 

impraaslve entrance. Under 

LEEN HOP WOOD at 390-3321 
MLS 38934 


xve'rp ojurn t/> view daily. 
Weekdays 1-4 and 1-9 1 > m. 
Sat. and Sun. 1-4 p.m. 
or call 366-6331 


Easy care rocky lot to 

TLE WITH RUSSE1 
177-0141 or 386-9S74 


side of the mountain adjoining 


$ioe ot int muytnim vup 

• • { We have on excel lent selection John Q Mn Provincial Park, 
of 1-3 k> .-acre homg sites avail- underground hydro and telephone 

1 from i Services; complete underground, CHOICE 


ing site ofl Interurban Half farm- 
able; frulr trees. 872,500. 477-1219. 



WANTED IM 
ESQUIMALT 

Point-hockhekihts. 3 


131.500 to $44 500 


PROPERTY. IDEAL 


5 a *e 

Rec room. Mi 
.siopinq from front 
or few *'— ‘ 


with I 

386-9574 


from front to r 
steps. To 8 MMX 
RUSSELL AT 


TAKE THE FIRST 
STEP TO 
BETTER LIVING! 


sanitary sewage system and treat -1 for retired person, special offer, 
ment plant, underground domestic | 477 - 3164 . 

“ 200.0“ - 1 — — 


good owners suites, 
turn on asking price o 

Modern three bedroo _ 

grocery store, plus rental cotl___ 
on 6 acras of land at Qualicum 
Bay. only SIISJF 10 
Suoarh' 
safe 


PROPER- 


water system with <w.uuu genun marop uifuv 

reservoir for year-round water t « D ark-like well timbered'Beau- 

sat sr»as!iS4 siag p . 

* five street lighting. I 

Now is the time to choose your J 7 * PKOPEK7? WANTED 

-s*\w s* ^ 

THE PERMANENT | Aft^ 1 ^’h5i?»' A '2-‘ 5; weTkJJuH 


COMPARE 
THE LUXURY 
TOWNHOUSES 
Then Come To 


LOOK 


59*-3*40. 


i i slve rertdentiei community that 
will carefully grew here. There 
may never again be a develop¬ 
ment like tM$- <M| 

, Peninsula. 


on the Saanich 


beautiful sea view 

SUITE 

ONLY $43,500. 

?nd floor tactna 5.E. HigB^ 

. or vate setting with glorious 
^ reiSTfor miles. Wait till ypu 

* • see the view of the Inner H*r- 

• nour at night, it's oreathtak-i 

ffi&Hs ‘"tJJSI: 7925 Simpson Rood 

rrmiTr. stsss »v°sji ,off mt NfwToM x rd i 

_ (nr In* vi#W. 


1 have serious buyers tor: 

'i FAIRPIEVD character h 

quiet street, mid to high 6 

2 FAiRFifto up and dow 


MACGRONCH DEVELOPMENTS ' S2£S2“r5!2^ 

ANNOUNCES i raation Centre on East Saanich 

yu nuts ! Road. From Pat Bay Highway 

fturn off at McTavIsh. 

SALES OFFKE 




j anV SID- AREA closa to town. 

a 7 -bedroom house In prime lo¬ 
cation with full basement and 

n * # v nA T<T ft 


388-*2! 


shawnigaK 

MANOR 


ian Manor is a sn\ifl. pri-* 
Bvision located on " 


. „J 5 B ov>-3*jj 

CEDRIC STEJELE RLTY. LTD_ / ti , arni of ShawnigirTLake. The 
a * / a k iT-t-ns general Public has no access to the 

WAN 1 LLs development, which contains these 

Duplex or in-law Has to have * JL, lu !!3L 5 t!L 

BRs each side, dose to snooping V,< vd £ 15 ' "••••; 
centr# if possible ,,e *d installed ,ara» ueecn area 

room designed for tna v'«w- Enerpy-savlnq Insulation Thermo-1 FRANK SALE dn 2 'ftt*!! boat, dock, tennis court 

in-line dining room. Testefullv , gi^j windows, attached ceroorts. 362-9191 BUS. PAGER 738 f'V* recreat-on area, close to v.i 

npeccable throughout. En- extra large kltchan*. spacious pro- * IRENE VAN . • »chool site. For fur- 

„ te storage. Many cupboard*. deMpned Interiors, top 382-9191 BUS. RES. 592-9194 Mlor information call 

Sauna. swIrlpoo . and Aork-l |ln# ctSntH, beautiful thick - - 

shop lnd. Excellent bus s»r- earpetsThedtllator fireplaces in 
vice. Don't miss this ( one. two-bedroom homes, bay windows. 

Trades t 0 P- private back yards, fully land 

scaoed and muen more. 


656-7041 

t0:»- 4 JD 

OR 

MIKE RUDDY 
656-4089 
388-6275 
PAGER 792 


URGENTLY 
REQUIRED 

Two to 16 acras within 16 miles 
of Victoria. Price negotiable if 
property suitable Call me 

S uickly with or without house. 

EN GREIG 286 6'*4 or 
598-3105. CASTLE PROPER 
TIES. _■ 


HAVE LAND OR PROJECT? 

W# sre Interested In buvna land 
'or subdivisions, site for high, me¬ 
dium cr low density, or reveni;* 
prciectS'ln progress. Phone Kaseal 
Construction. 38*4191 


.. .start of l_ _ _ 

urea* 1 wrnJnitC^Tiao^o. * ,,,ion ‘' and * Iohn A -» Princc Georuc. 

Sgg%g. '*• | HYLAWD j 

-- - plus 

ftBQft __ _, _ _ 

1978, aged 62. Predeceased ov 
his wife, Iris June. February, 

1977. Survived by three sons. 

Rick and De*n of Victoria, and 
Mike of Nanaimo also daughtar- 
in-law Cheryl and three grand¬ 
sons, all of Nanaimo. j 

Private cremation. In lieu ot 
flowers donations may be made to 

the Canadian Cancer Fund Ar j . _ _ 

« W | ,-*NiC>N - In tevln. ■»,« 


Cail^Afbert AAasaretto, Nanaimo 
SMitv Parksville Ltd-. 24 * 41*7 or 
757-9343 


entries Howtrd Ifind MarstW. Alio five Wand 
Nanaimo, formerly of Victoria, children, 
passed away on August ^31st, _ 

BCKTUCCCOlI — *»9 tOVbtO mem¬ 
ory ot my deer friend Ror.aid 

JSv^on B |2lf C Jii It?? 


EAGUECREST 

The finaet modern development of ^ _ 

Qualicum area. True lovely 
rancher offers almost 2600 so. ft. 
on one floor surrounded by v» acre 
o sweeoing lawns and gerdans. 
right down to No. 1 fairway. All 
rooms art ieroe. 4 badrms. sunk- 
en living rm., with cathedral ceil- 
mg. large dining and family rms., 

t»Lf Lor,* 1 ^^. ssi 

tufts, 

mHijonaire to live like one. See 
this today. MLS insi. 

283-0795 MR. GREENB 384-8124 



beloved husband Norman, 
who passed away September 2. 
1977. 

There N e link death cannot 
sever. 

Love end remembrance last for- 


JOHNSON — in the Roval Jubilee 
Hospital, on August aoth. 1978.' 

Mrs. Dorcas Paulina Euphenna 

1£m°cJS$. 1 l,i ‘ l0, '" a 

ySOwNT^- 1 




» ( S,. tnd 1 4Ft»r N T 0T <i 

H* . l 3WgJ t * , l I OLD, AGE SHALL NOT WE 4 By 

TV EM, NOR THE TEARS CON 
Cy ^ ' mtLj^ ^MN. AT THE GOING OOWN 
hqmat. htr fether, eo.yp.jphgg Iqp thf SUN. and in the 

SK^riTIK:; °S*S* ** *'«• " EMEM 

Shaw. Victoria! uncles and aunts "lEnv 

lf| Albarta, nieces and neohews; j BflfMORATlTUDILSANDS 


WANTED TO i’UY SEA FRONT afte^^O^^wnta Bo^l/.^iVke*' Servi^wll^bTheld in the Sands’, 
Ijt .WfHto Point area preferred. Cowfchen. V0R ?G 6 ._Mortuary Limited "Memonal '^1 





PRICED BELOW 
REPLACEMENT 

$43,500 and $45.U00 * 

As low as $1173 down, monthly 
payment* can ba lower than rent. # 

OREN TO VIEW DAILY 
Weekdays 24 Sat, sun. 1-3 

652-44*1 or 3B6-0897 
E.Y. CONSTRUCTION 


Bedfords Best Buys 

f?Ohe bedroom, oround floor 
rastern exposure, large 900 sq M 
in well managed, * veer old. se*- 
rrdnt building, excellent sterage. 
rovered perkinq. immaculate con 
dlton, includes, range, fridge, dllh- 
wqsngr and garburafor. Gross 



_THE PERMANENT _ 

CASH FOR 
YOUR HOME 

investors will pay cash now 
suitable homes up to $*0,000. 
-1 NICHOLLS 


595-6281 

743-5101 

9 a.m.-9 p m 




GLENN f_ 

5144 59*7489 

, L. Mann E Associate* Ltd. | 


CUALTA 

HEIGHTS 


SEAVlEW 

$28,500 

Check this excellent 2-acre lot 
overlooking Sooke Harbour. Make 
an otter, ouild riqht away or hold 
for capital gain. Beach access is 
close and you can anchor a beat in 
shattered Anderson Cove- Call 
today. Eleanor Sanderson. 384-9*10 
or 479-!**7. 

J. H. Whittomo 4 Co. Ltd. 


380 ACREAGE FOR SALE 
AND WANTED 


UNIQUE 1 ___ 

1 with ull basement on beautiuliv 
treed acre. Cobble Hill area, 
j 834,300, 112-743-4*46. 

TBO FARMS FOR SALE 
AND W ANTED 

20 ACRES 1 

PENINSULA 

70 ACRES OF PR'ME F 6 RM- ' 
LAND, including Irrigation system. 
Basically 'evei with som'Esidoe, 

- Cordova mostly fenced, some presently cul- 

, ---- lat cleared parcel tivefed. Included in the price of 

waiting for someone to do some- $146,000 is an older farm home Tn 
thing with it. Terrific potential for .good condition with 4 bedrooms, 
nvestment In the future. Offers on I barn and various other outbutki¬ 
ll 25,000. ML 347 *. Ings. Well priced and ready to 

.... work MLS 34 | 93 Ca ,| tQ yleWr 

- “ “scDONALD 386-3494 * 


CORDOVA 

BAY 

ACREAGE 

Nke flat * 1 


BEDROOM HOME ' £T!, ‘■imi^ t 

(inant nn hBlutlLill/ TUCSuBy, jtn, Iy/| •* ^ 

rneni on oeauTiuii✓ 3:0Q pw p#v K M Co , rison 

ficiating. Flowers grateful!v de¬ 
clined. Those so desiring may con¬ 
tribute to the Canadian Cancer So¬ 
ciety, 857 Caledonia Ave., Victorl*. 

BC ' SANDS—VICT OR IA 


110 FUNERAL D1RECIORS 


Oesirati# 

% ‘ 


"PHIL WARDEN. 477-7291 
D.F.H. REAL ESTATE LTD. 


NEtL R. Mscl 

” CENTURY 21 Wastem Homes 
1037 Cioverdeit Ave., 
380-3494 (U firs.) 


(24 


ta>«s $503 86 , 

nvKt $48 71. 

• on. Prka $34,900. 


raz. 

- CIO 


maRU^ j TH)S 


Paopi# Hetpmg People ’ 

WHAT IS Tl'? 
WHERE IS IT? 
how Much isrr? 


PRAIRIE COUPLE lonbnuWulTMoqltMbun. I ^ «S2£R04D 

UROENTVY require ? o. J tain. Views. Trees. gVWB' ATH *-° NE "°° DS ARLA 

?H^i?^Tc°’M«y£, ,,0,d 47781i wat,r ' h $' rtro . telephone. All lSS8uw»re». This I .12 ACRES 

sastle* prS*eYti'esT ^ |“?• «, H iTTSItUtSEI!? CENTRAL SAANICH 

"rs . A iw 'ir^eua imkT 12.498 Rq. ft. b'g mi. from All ready to QO at the asking price Aoprox. 25 acres meadowtand, 

OAK BAY SOUTH city From Victoria takf 'Sattl^.L ^^ For furtt * r in " - - • - - 

Must have 3 badrms., Iwm*l dm- j Sixike Rd. ‘-.-mile past Met- RON or PATRICIA SEDGF.R 

S ! 09 TflE'nrJl™ abi * chosin cut-off Tseft onto Fill -' 477- ®* 91 479-3*73 room house end other buildings j with vallev views. 73 stall barn 

Lnosin cui-oir onto but Royal Trust tormarly used In family dairy with appropriate corralls The 

POSKiTT 4 / 7 - 064 $ j ton, r*^M onto Bexhill to'-: . ■ — -- operation Excellent location aerpaae has twn oonds on it and 

l *** **** Pr pgi nt— L td._V„ a |ta Prpxcpnt «tirt 7 an«l i SHAWNIGAN LAKE Great Potential. For furthar mtor- has a gentle stdot to th# south. 

‘WANTED^ FOR SPECIAL iL " V r r* cenl dT1(1 Za P* td tr fi()A motion cad: .Central Saanich location A oroear 

dient weterfront at Lest Place. saUsff |jer»on on site. S’*"® btocK1 from J^ waitord OWict •*** S&^SS, SSSSS^B ni nIhti^ >B,u *r.^* Aft 

?bedrooms. OoflfcMse^ bMch. For further information- S S9| U ^ h ■, 4 "‘ 1 Sl , . , .i t v t < *^ knuosJn 5 Kjt *4 £ 1 vic?oa 

- GOERT T EN 477-6217 


13.2 ACRES $225,000 

mainder treed including fir end A beautiful setting enhances this 
cedar Beautiful farmland sloping well laid out oenilamai's farm. A 
— oently to the south. Older 2-fced- bla tvws storey 4 bedroom home 
479-3*73 room house and other buildings' with vallev views. 23 star 
tormarly used in family dairy with appropriate corralls. 


Phone Allan Klenman.' Town and __ _ 

Country Raaliy Ltd. S9^977l >‘>rm or 

r«A I 


„ ^ SAC, OFF KENNETH 
STRiET. LAKEHILL IS.PRICED 
TO SELL^QUICKLY AT *41,5*0. 
MLS. VIEW ANYTIME WlTHi 


TOWl _ 

D E - 5 A C 



further information:: V) |iage centre, on outet, mceiv 
Jill Sewell. 658-5713 treed cul-de sec Priced to MM.'Fl- 

_nencing available Build riQhi 

j swav or hold as InvastmeiiV MLS 

1 35744 

598 *174 BOB CARTER 3I5-2*<1 
Swinerton Stewart Clark Ltd. 
REALTY WORLO 


SELL TODAY 

Receive cash for your aguity 
Call 38S-U31 

British American Really Ltd 


GXF COURSE 
PROMT AGE 
ARDMORE 
ESTATES 


Block Bros. Realty Ltd 

QUILT 
COUNTRYSIDE 


COMMUNITY CHAPELS 

$rtrS!^ T Wf%SSi PLATED TO SERVING 
- “ “ Vancouver Island Families 


AAcWIU-IAM — Marlon May, *t 
home on 23 August, 1978, “ 


tarto. Survl _ 
husband. Peter and two sons, 
Glen of Pender Harbour and 
daughter-in-law Ter,, and Katth 
at Richmond, two sisters, Joane 
\ of Vancouver. Doris 
rd of Bella Coola and 
John Leavens of LH- 





I service was held on 
_/. August X. at st An¬ 
drew's Anglican Church, Sidney 
B.C. Rev. Colin Campbell officia¬ 
ted and cremation followed. 


HERE 

WHEN 

YOU 

NEED US 


1-ACRE LOTS 
$21,000 


Esiy 


.One bedroom, top floor, Sea 
'•w* over Outer Harnpur and to r*n KAY 
'•ooke Hills S«t# buHding end J|M SSEY 3*5-822* 

rquismer.t as above i axes $45*.3a, 3*5-8771 lanvtime) , 

monthly maiptenanc,e $46.72 Im- _ " m S- 

edial* possession Prka * 11*06 ADMIRALS HARBOUR VIEW 
MLS TOWNHOUSES 

- One b ? <, r? 0f T2'_2? p r URGENT •y”» w»™ »«•> 36 * 44^4 

I LJL.pi. U/Av. In r.eed of old home, will buv for Course Frqntage. and all lots have WESTMONT REALTY (1977) LTD 
I nerxe. VY r\U cash 652-15*2 h Tdro wafer, telephone, cablevi--,- 

c.awi sfwt - A -— rtrslnt VJar., .aali. __ . — .. a >a> . ,.e>.ai 


Beacon Hill Park, western #’ 
posure. Leasehold, t yr. old build- 
ig, monthly malntenence $65.00 
ncludes taxes and hot water heal 
ng, Home Owner Grant Dedoc 
table yearly from monthly from 

'nonthly mai ntenence, ini maculate Forty.fhree of these 4 * townhomes 

■-SSK- 

si6,000 at I0 5 o into 
oaymarrts of $13*.03. 

MLS- 


ANO New subdivision paved road- ser 

_ _., v -- -- vices to the let, ready »e buhd! 

YOUNG COUPLE SEEKING Choice 1-acre lots in this exclusive Will ■* suil Mobile Homi 
starter home, immediate financing 

confirmed to 115,000 Phone neeneno and see some ot the e*- IRV L'DSTONt 

cennrmee to *»^xiu i-no « C| f jf>g cusl0m nomes bamg built in 3 * 6-4434 477 - 69*2 

this development. We still have WAYNE BUTTERFIELD 

• ibie with Golf - — 


Gentle slope fantashc views and ‘ *^ri? E oi#nti?^f 

cherry trees and city water. Youj ° l 5 l * r h .^l ra 2 aJLi fc * r rioa^ion ,V iv». 
must see this beautiful location 1 und ?. r ® r . ound 

within 7-mlle circle i 6 ACRES 
ONLY $54,000. MLS 34373. Call •'TCTjfij 
JACK DAVIS 3 * 6-3494 (24 hr$). 1 47 * 51*7 

CENTURY 21 WtS’ern Homes *? ACRES, NeXr DUNCAN, 
1637 Clovtrdeir Ave. Ouod__ f!4T ' land $V!,600. PH. 


40*0 Granville Ave 


477-6002. 


some lots availabt 


386-4434 


m m 


si on and storm drains. Very reails 


SEA AND MOUNTAIN VIEW 
BY OWNER 


3*^3454 (24 hrs.) 

LAND 

1. 7.5 acres part cleared, part 
treed. 4 stall horse barn, year 
round pond. Asking $29,300 

2. 3 acres Metchgein nigh lot with 
some timber, easy financing. Ask¬ 
ing $21,000. 

3 . View lot in e. rural area of 


38*-6*76. 


GULF ISLAND 
PROPERTIUS 


MARSHALL - Charles W. In Vlc- 
torla General Hospital on August 
30, 1978 altpr a lenothy Jlness. 
Born March 17. 1901 In Newcas¬ 
tle, England, a resident in Victo¬ 
ria since 1946. Predeceased bv 
his wife Gertrude Decern er 1973 
and a daughter vnerie in 1970. 
Survived bv his ton Donovan, his 
daughter Mrs. A. G. Ford (Mo 
define), and six grandchildren. 
Mr Marshall retired from tr,e 
National Film Board in 19*6. He 
was an honorary life member of 
Vancouver island Pmlatdlic 
Society. 

Funeral service will te held 


Services, 4725 Falaise Drive Chap¬ 
lain W. Howie oftk afing Crema¬ 
tion. Flowers gratefully declined, 
donations may be made »o u»e 
Cancer Cliftlc. Royal Jubilee Hos¬ 
pital;- Arrangemants throuah rh# 
Memorial Society ef B C. and First 
Memorial Services Ltd 



e„~-..ti u . ~ -- iLZ. _I—> 1-^. J View IOT in • rural a-ca O’ rmy non ana UTOGtCOI Clinx 

LTtoJ! and^ Stdna? Metchoejn. VfA ,d> O^glg $290 down. $290 per month. 


A DCACAKII ! WANT OLDfc* HOME. 

RcAbUN ! jpurc hato fdr c^. 479- 22 09. - „ .... 

_ __LISTINGS WANTED ^‘henderson realty ltd. 741 F^f^lc^d^^Rd^neSt 

KaK-jias-Mw.--—-1^— SaBfc w&r J .....I 


HORNBY ISLAND 

Tan acre* close to sohooi commu 
nlty hall and ntedkal clinic I 


MORRIS — In Victoria. B C. no I 
August 31st. 1978. Mr Kenneth 


RICHARDS. Mr. John Lestev 
3:30 P.m. FAMILY CHAPEL 


SkW ii Mtd 55 V«ri Hf, TO BE ANNOUNCED 
k °2Srv1Sd By"hS tovlS^ wdt! ! DANIELS. Mr WHfred William 


_ __ beach. A .kinq $35,000. 

478-55*1 BOB PAUL 478-247“ 
BLOCK BROS. REALTY LTO. 


6 ACRES 




sorry, look at 
then come 
homes in the 


"THE CASTLE" 
ESTATE SALE 
EXPANSIVE VIEW 1 

Truly a beautiful 1500 sq. ft., 

2 bedroom "condo" wtth bal¬ 
cony An exhilarating vlaw. 
immediate occupancy. Lots of 
extra cupboards built in Twoi 
4-oc. bathrooms!! I^xl?* din-1 
- no room. 12'x8' Master bed 
room Includes sauna, cool 
games room, etc. $74 o.m. 
assessment includes heat 
Fasy viewing. MLS 35201 
Frank WdlS. 388-7957 or 
hM-8269. Asking $74,900. the ao- 
praised value. In one of Victo¬ 
ria's finest quality con -1 

dominium complexes — the 
Satncer Cestie — so beautiful 
a setting Parklike grounds 
Hurrv on this. CAPITAL CITY 
REALTY LTD. 


aC’SK.Bi^vt»sisKr^rT 1 '^!Km vgt ***iSt "**■ USM 

*llu 22!,j^lcan halo you. We have a number or 59?-*417 orJ»e : 477^pger. 871_| J A ZEL^LARKE NORMA HILL I 591 5144 KEN MANN 477 *773 

- 394.1101 3*3-779* T. L. Mann 8, Associates L»d._ 

Knowles Realty Ltd. "APPROX IMA 1 tcY .40 ACRES, 



flat building Eleven 

ll timbered, t southw 


half acre $25,000 


Ellen; three 'children, Patricia 
(Mrs. Rick McGuire), ViCtdHb. 1 

? .C., Ltn. Vencouver, B.C., and 
erry, at home, sister, Miss 
Constance Mor-ls. Victoria, 
B.C.; and two granddaughters. 
- * ^—fr McGi ‘ 


MeCALL BROS. 
Flural Funeral Chapels 
385Hl4n5 


1 and power i»tnn' end Cyndy McGuire, Viclo- 


rie, 


DENAAAN ISLAND 


New subdivision treed five to fif¬ 
teen acre pieces close to beech. 


$22,000 and up. 


15SJC * »»•• *42-37*8 Sit. S^: 

mounrein >n/( ,.»| u «# 


Southwest expoeur# $35,900. 


OPEN HOUSE 
Sat - 2 to 4:00 
301-141 Bushby St. 

Sunny Fairfield—just steps to thf 
8*sch. 7 bedrooms, 1 extra large 
2—4-piece bathrooms. beautlfu 
stone fireplace. 5 quality appli¬ 
ances, washer end dryer In suite. 

2 balconies. 1 glassed In. Sea more —.. - rAA - 

views and corner windows, bright, PcADY for occupancy. LOOK 
clean and homey Quick posses- THE PRICE! 
slot. As new. *57.900. MLS. 

Call SUSA ft or JACK BETTS 
427-4042 or 385-2411 
Swinerton Stewart Clerk Ltd. 


TOWNHOMES 

BY 

TULL 

970 SOUTHGATE 
Across from Beacon Hill Park 


2 Bedrooms, l’a laths 
Phone tq view 


We win gladly come out, qive vou • fo£ »r« readsTto'go so Mu£ry'|® 1 ?2' *j C ^ Rlan^Prov}^ ^tvanlng* gBlv^""' [Alpine home on landscaped acre,-- —■ ^- lr 

rk fL •SflWS? fiQUG. POWELL 386-6164~ or •'J- r^nuToo !- rUTr^mlTTm fa- ]"*" *** ! gratefully declined, Those j* desk 


the 
property. 
assist vo 


I THE PROFESSIONALS 
the guaranteed sales plan, 
izik Homes Realty 
.*>8572 (24 hrs.) 


see Whet you want and 592-6417 or 38W75 rger 87* 
all the wav. CASTLE PROPERTIES 

"'™! . SEAVIFYV!!! 

87.900 

7 arr# lot located 


\ a \ .t J Kim/U. V I UR I PA *kf\C« 

rRHONE 


FXCIIANGF. RFAL 
KSTA'I E 


1 EXCHANGE and SW r AP fSp^LERCH 

1w« would consider anv offer or LA NAPA TRUST _ 

wiwMtava S, V0Uf tK °°* r,V ^ WATER VIEW 

ONLY YOU 

! 9 62 Acres, house, barn, swimmlna 
POOL BeeuMoi orooerty tor horses 
and goat farming. 

mTles 'to town. Willis P 01 


_Place^Dean Park Estate# $42,000. To jiqq.ooo please Mary McGuire. 

656-5992. __ ' 479-1*67 anytime. 

; A rsn I 4 4 r 1 r\T J H VVhittome and Co. LW. __ 

A PRIME LOT 10 4 C g ES> OUNCAN AREA. 

M.t’.kMi.'°°9 third acre Only asking Good soil, trees. $12,966. Phone 
Metchosm area Situated on a no- $28 275. Full Serviced Private 388 4876 
Tt ,r °vah street, high up Bremer Backing onto Butchard Gardens <>■»— ■ ■ 

Helohts. This parcel is already MLS33185 Cell Tom Evans 1*0 avis 

serviced with water hydro and 6 *2-2620. 386-7545. Island Homes SM IT-BUM) 

Je|eohone_ Act quickly on th>s_one ^td PROPERTIES 


eran — .... 

saw service in Italy. France. 
Belqium. and Holland. He was 
employed with the B C. Govern¬ 
ment Environment Department 
♦or the pasl 30 years. 

Service' In the Sands Mortuary 
Limited "Family Chapel of Memo 
ries" on Tuesday. September 5th. | 
1978 at 11:00 a m. Rev. E. € Aus- 
tin officiating. Cremation. Flowers 
qratefully declined. Those so dtslr I 
ing may contribute to the Canad 1 ( 
COLLECT 112-335-2475 .an Cancer Societv. 857 Caledon.a 
SINCLAIR, AGENT I Ave., Victoria. B.C 
33V0129. SANDS—VICTORIA 

NANAIMO REALTY “- 


I. B.C. Mr. AAorr is was a vet r*J />„ - r _, 

in of World War ll. where ne \jf\ QUHM7lK (BC Funeral Co ) 

tAruIra In IIaIv PrAP.Ci! r 

'Cbcmsw & (Serving 


Funeral Chapels 
1625 Quadra SL 
386-3506 


TEAkPLE 


HORNBY AND 
LAf*OS BRANCH 
HORNBY ISLANI 


CO- LTD., 

DENMAN IS 

NO. B.C. V0R 1Z0. 


1 RCXKLAND 

Lovely ievei landscaped and tr-en 
61x105 lot iust off St. Charles Re¬ 
duced ter quick sale to $42,900 


NEW 12-ACRE PARCEL, 
adjacent to Engliihma 
River Falls Park. See Photo 


NORTH PENDER ISLAND 

LOOK AT THIS” 

3 bedroom almost comgieted home 
on large sunny iot Plenty of seclu¬ 
sion for only $31,900. 


> Disirl 


2LOOO. 30.5 
let, $18,500 


■ Acre lots, Mill Bav $21,000 (sar- 


— 4 

SWIMMING POOL 

$44,000j 

Swimming pool for year round en¬ 
joyment, near all school levels and Also warehouse, 
un.vers.ty Spacious LR w th wood, houses and duRlaxes. - 

: A *° vFaYnI*b4tterfi&ld 
^ development. _VACAhrfjkN^j3*M408 __ _ 388 


___ _ rurcr raxm «-g.n __ HERE’S A BARGAIN 

.SomawhaT rugged But* bewutHiH ol^one FREDDY STARKE, display Sat. Time*, Sun. Co- 2 bedroom fully Insulated home 
* M * ,ur, tp ,r t£k wTllls P Po“r , MLS "‘castle propfbt.PS . td 1 lonUt for more details. ,with .axceUenl Wjde„gpen ocean 

- CAUL 

386-7521. Bl 

MENT CO 


netterfield 

NeYerfiekl. et- 
Ganges. passed 


CUNNINGHAM 
FUNERAL CHAPEL 
1155 TORT ST. 

Phone 384 *512 or *4-8676 

__ Offering dignified moderate ser¬ 
vice tor ail. Geo. S. Cqpnlnjl- 3 'n, 
— John Wilson owner, manager 

73 veers, of]---- 


away 


FIRST MbMORlAL SERVICE 
Roy’to’jutHliriW.Vai; Valeria. J^v»ng the• P«b..c and 
August 30th, 157k attar a lengtnv 

11 moss He teaves *0 mourn n.s 1 merlil gocl gty of B.C« iM-5 244. 

t.™ H l MONTMENTALS 

K oT***'(5th^‘ Cyi^ghtS STEWART MONUMENTAL 
Ganges; five grandchildren; also Works Ltd. 

two Viter** Mr*. Ahary Cot ESTABLISHED 1896 

tlnoham, In Ontario, and Miss j Marble fireplace end tabietccs 
Ann Neiterflaid, wtonip*g. Mam- ' i«j AAay St. .. 384-3451 


BOORMAN BEAUTIFUL BRENTWOOD ngj.-i.jg] 388-6273 3 to a<re view orooerty * 35,066 

LTD . 612 FORT ST The last on Merchant Road, near ^ ' ***** 

— the see. Treed, good soil and ser- naffer 909. 1 


Funeral ear vice v 


viced. 


Two *100 sq. M. L_ 

One 93*5 sa. ft. 825.000 
Owner. *52-3428. 652-234* 


ft. *23,0 
ft. *25.01 


* JOFFRE MANOR 
-w^UTl E-SQfLTVT^T ROAD 

Your last chance to own a rew 1 
bedroom or 2-bedroom suite close 
♦o shopping pleza so don't be dls 
aopolnted. 20-suite hultdlra fen 
lures large bright rec room aod 
loyqge, separate hofcbv room. 


: 477-0982 


IRV LIDSTONE 


THE. PER/AANENT 


Low Down Payment 
3 B.R. - $40,900 


The accommodation is emple and 
there is a full bsmt. in this 2-sfory 

„_ w , __ townhoyse unit. The price is one of 

Easy financing with ouick posses ; the best available but 

- -- -- --- ----— period I more. The vendor can assist you 

- ...»i. a graduated mortgage pay 

• --will 


BRENTWOOD BAY 
INVESTMENT 

Haaan Road and Wallaca DHv*.--—--- 

COME 'N 23,000 sq. ft. lot. IdUv serviced. SHAWNIGAN AREA. 2.4* ACRES. 

1 beauflfully wooded, and can te frontage on two roada, *31.»0. 

, ''J divldedST9A» MLS. $3,000 down Or fled# tor 

381 * 5a 1 ;^ T «<* Waltord „9 f 1 , ; c «i small boat, sawered lot or "fixer 

598-1420 477-1841! upper" home. Leo Van Dvk, 

Bloc k Bros. Re alt y Lid. ; 386-3965. Victoria RealtyJLtd. 

WESTMONT REALTY (1977) LTD ~ ~ A.nD'DC OWNER*. ELDERLY PEOPLE 

WF mavp— a — Af»« f ii tfr Z. IZ a'UKCJ disoosing land Excellent parcel S 

& SHAWNIGAlM j 

! R^ifY-wjrSi»8?rjaw?sS 

3*3-7*21. The lake. - Privacy 


large 


GORDON HEAD LOT* 


sion or 6-month interest-free period mon 
to dispose of vour presenl proper 1 with 
fv. Open with CLARE BROCK.'men 


fv open with CLARE _ 

Mon.-sit., 1:36 - 4:30, or phone 
593 4321 Of SM-2173. 

ikY K REAlLTY LTD._ 


OAK I 


OPEN HOUSE 

Sot. 2-4 
1792-Rockland 

A real oeaufy In good residential 
district bendy to iveryth.ng Spa¬ 
cious 2-BR, bdth and half condo., 
large kltchan,' roomy LR-DR. 

* LYLE WICKS 477-5151, 3*5 24*1 
Swinerton Stewart Clark Ltd. 
REALTY WORLD 
OAK BAY, BEAUTIFUL SUR 

ssasssium."*i!ea».« 

•-outh. comoletalv returbiahad^ ax- 
cellant hot water and heatlnd in 
ujded. Monthly asseismant. Bv 
•wner, 995-41*3. 

I '■ 11 ■ ' 1 

IM TOWTSHOISES 


SWINERTON** 

sa 


ment programme and they 
pay all legal ct^t*. Sound interest¬ 
ing. you bet Early possession pos¬ 
sible on this ML. 

NEIL RAWNSLEY 
3*6-2111 595-1507 

MO NTREAL TRUST CO. 

OPEN HOUSE , . 

SATURDAY 1:(XM:00 
1010 FALMOUTH ^ 

QUALITY 3 bedroom town ho me j 
years old Superior finish end spot 
less thfouohout. Unique high and 
privata location. Extras inclucfe 
dishwasher, qualify ceroe-s 
storage areas. IV* baths, private 
patio, covered parking. Price re¬ 
duced. now S49.900. 

Office Dave Vogel 
4770*41 

Block Bros. Realty Ltd 
’^UNIVERSITY 
$45,500.00 
95^ FINANCING 
(IF YOU QUALIFY» 

I No Lagal Fees. No Mortgage In¬ 
surance, Move In Now 

CALL: 

JOHN ADDICOTT 

13SS-6454 477-8232 

Realspan Propertie* Ltd. 


TfiA'? 9 s 5 ~ 'nr I 7- Strate-tIfle- 

21 Mavfeir 1 Close to University end Racquet 
*'* |Club. Phone Jim Webber. 3*2-727* 

-1 or AS?-5977 (res.). 

Town * Country Realty 


5-BEDROOM HOMI NEAR JUBI- jutth or trad 

tee Mosoital, plus nnlshed base- GEORGE WALL, 
ment Accept heavy equipment. 477 05*8. CENTQRY 
land, etc., as part payment. Realty. 
m -9034 anytime.__ _ . __ 

FAIRFIELD TRLPLEX GROSSES' LAST CHANCt t ——*- - - 7 - 

$10,000 Asking $85,000. Consider j u ,t one lot laft at *72 900 In the GorOe WoterVieW 
motor home or luxury auto as part Gordon Head area on which we .. . . ^ r, 

down payment 365-1738. _ touW custom Buiid vou e home 1 g" >y J l „-g* t,r . v . l *yJP t 2... 

Ml U)T 8 row SAI,r X,l“. «!•»• *»£»> nse* InvtstnMfltt 

---- Canst. Co Ltd.. 538 Dupplin Rd. at Ltd.. 388-9*44 anytime._ 


LJ 

WESTMONT 


I 36*4191 or res. 384 2197. _ 


1 GROUP OF SIX SMALL LOTS. 
. ' Fully serviced and ready to 00 , 

...IDT including sewers. underground 

Just reduced from $76.96*' * ! 

j 5 T ‘ oRJSdTlO.TftTs*-! 4§* 


Stewart 
Ltd. 

REALTY WORLD 


dark 


Lakefront 2 bedroom trailer 


OLD COUNTRY 
ANTIQUES 

Location suited to enormt.. 
growth for an ambitious buslnet* 
man, 3.19 acres with over 500' t.c. 
Highway frontaoe Prasentiy soe 
cialliinq In antiques, second hand 
and o»d firearms The asking price 
of $140 000 Includes comfortable 
living quarters as well as several 
tho< sand sq. ft. of showrooms 
CONTACT Oon Shaw at Duncan 
Realty Ltd.. 748-315* or 748-8312. 


_ H held Friday. 

! September 1st. e< i P.m. in St. 
Ggprgt’s - Anglican Church. Rev. 
WmcC orner oH,cia««l Ar- 
rangements by G.udman rt 
Home, Ganges. 


Memoriei or Distinction 


Funeral 


Other oroeertles from *6.000. Come 
to the "Bahamas of Canada" bv 
calling Ted Dever 112-629-3371 or 
112-629 3434. 


Duncan Realty Ltd. 

1-300 Brae Rd. 

Duncan 74*-3l5* 

75 acre farm on mein highway 
south of Duncan This property 
has the potential for a real profit¬ 
able farming operation. 


cleared. Try your down payment. 


Salt Spring 
Investment 

Oof Imi Stic Pbout the future of 
Ganges? Then consider the two 
parcels of lend adjacent to the 
hospital end fronting on Lower 
Ganges Rd. Parcel one Is 2Vk 
•eras on the corner of Lewer 
Ganqes Rd and Croflon Pi Of 
'ered at $175.60* (ML 35679) and 
parcel two is just under 1W acres 
i has a spacious rambling du- 
ix on It plus a summer cotteoe 
i is offered at *1*4.000 (ML 

D.F.H. REAL ESTATE LTD. 


HOME AND ACREAGE 

u..iij; r „ • ivrms QTryr«j siv.ruv. oao-'-'ja 5 bedroom home built on the post 

. ■hnrt ^r^. d i l ? 9 - J^i^- _- and beam decor. Beautifully de- 

RRf>ADMFAD corated. Large family room. 3 
1 tc mi a v D K UIV\ CAN U jathrooms. Utility on main floor. 

DCilTV Mtm qoo j ja j , ti nm 477 4 $sa Aoprox. one-third acre lot in area Large sundeckaFull basameni. Ex- 

RcAuY 388*4434 tine homes, next to 44*9 Emily ctUent loc *„ 0 n. Farm ot 8 acres. 4 

V I • Knowles Reeify LIT * * Carr Dr. Must sail. *38 8144. _ acres treed Lovely stream run- 

SUPERB SEAVTEW ! COUNTRY LOTS __, SEAVTEW' LOT »T750 1 hJ^h^e^si-sSsi' o^otficTO' 


park — Kennel uf Victoria for¬ 
merly of C#i» . r* Aloerta, #♦ 
Royal Juollee -Pi1«l on Mcgust 
31, 1978, age c. ears. Survived 
by his loving •«.;#. Anne, one 
ueughter, Beverlle; elso two 
brotnars end five sisters, neph¬ 
ews end niece* Mr. Park was a 
member ot St. Mark's Loose No 
111 A.F. and AAA., also a 
member of Valiev ot Ceigerv m 

Memorial service will be heia 

C. Holmes officiating, cremation. 
Mowers gratofuuv oecHnep, dona 
♦Ions may ba mediate the B.l, 
Heart t-ounuetton. Arraneemants 
through Ida Memorial Society of 
jTcTantf Hrst - “MjM 


MORTIMER’S 
Monumental Work* 
3m421 

709 KINGS RD. (at Douglas) 
FOUNDED 1877 


SIS MISCELLA.N FAIL'S 


IN MEMORIAM DONATIONS 
to ba used exctuslvety for 
CANCER RESEARCH 
should be directed to 
CANADIAN CANCER SOCIETY 
157 Caledonia Ave.. Victoria 


1 Memorial services 


- -I v.- One of the levetest unobstructed 

>ave Vogelgesang 3**-54«4 ; * MV j #w , |» offered from this one- 
Pager 7*0 tnird acra lot located on a Quiet no 
Ihrough street Irt Cordova Bey. 
There are very lew of these unique 
properties available and vet the 
(ull price is only $60,000. MLS 
3*8-4434 JOHN BUNYAN 383-7777 


> j acre. Wetor and 


V 3 to 1 acre lots In the area c al1 . Brino 
of Prestloious homes at a real h!dro 
ist.ic B rice O, . $32 '9® 0 -.? nd , u 8 f / STAN SAGE, 592-350* 
1 Cao Truit ' 3 * 4 “ 800 ’ 


her home 758-5962 or office Direct 
Line *81-4430 or locally 794-4401. 
Block Brothers Realty Limited. S3 
Royal victoria Cres., Nanaimo, B C. V9R 
5B9 




145 ACRES 
SOOKE ROAD 

Good holding property with cree 
running through centre of prooei 
tv. Second growth timber. Price 


AHDP 

TOWNHOUSES 

$1290 down put* you In your 
3 bedroom, good 


market. Located on Took# Rd. One that 7 separate houses, connected PETE 


— galley kitchen — ll 
excetlem starters. Fti 


— these art 
. Fuir #rlci 


Family Townhouse 
$33,900 


REALTY WORLD* 

' Are You Always 
,_7 On-the-Go? 

No time for garden efforts? Then 

VoiAf^DUSB couldjlej^^nwer 
for you I Ideally ptannad for gra¬ 
cious entertaining and aasy, caig- 
frae living. Conveniently situated 
in nicety freed, natural s-ttlnq, of¬ 
fering HARBOUR and MOUNTAIN 
VIEWS. MLS 33503 
9A4.-900 

3*5-2481 ED JUPF WMOIt 
•* SWfNCRTON, 

S TEWA RT CLARK,J^D._ 

VILLAGE GROVE 

Super value! Split level townhouse in fhe Jubilee area. f'>» bat _ _ 

m adult oriented, beautifully main- 1 basement with work shoo Plenty of 
Mined, perkhke eettlnn Newly de- room for kfds and pqts. W r r mort 
certfmd, choice location, $54..W a a g e Approximately $39,000 
To view ceil 47M778. 


Tastefully decorated wtth 3 L— 
rooms, 2 bathrooms, one toted patio 
beside a heated pool. Close to 

SM.l45 nd G^LaS?lA JONES* 8&. 
T L. Menn B Associates Ltd. 


$1,000 DOWN 

4 bedroom 7'^J year old townhouse 


creek I 
roper 1 
“ Iced 1 


a>UNTRY LOTS 

V* to I Acre lots In the tree of ^ 
prestigious homes at a resMs- 575-4333. 
tic price of $32,000 end up. A 
golfers paradise 


COURTENAY 

WATERFRONT 


BY THE SEA 

87 acres off Ardmore Beautiful 
beach, access across the rd. oood 

ywimminn. fishing, toveiv views (100x200) on Robinson Lake, paved 
-- Phone *56-3*75. road. Priced $10,500. 

_— I NANAIMO 

WATERVIEW PROPERTY Almost I •ere - area of 
VVaHv or Adeline 477-776* or 10.8 acre parcels, on south side of Pr,t |? n V fTimv 477-1841 

47745*2 or Capital City Realty, Mt. Newton on Ree Leigh PI 477 ‘ 57 ° 5 k | r £? 4 

Ltd. Otters te S64.9Q0. For appointment B,oc '' Bro * lto. 

I---—CTJ ^LEX Tot - j to View, 652-1*40, 

70 ACRES (One block from water In Brent-' H O L D I N G LOT WILKINiON 

One of 1t>e bast properties^on _the' wood. 90' frontage, wide troubh^so I Road^arwL $7,9J0_. Call 


nice 


APPROXIMATELY _ 
near Qualicum Baach. Large pas- 


new deluxe home plus older home 
rented. Large pravet pit on proper 
tv. Roms 8tc. are all in to ba able 
to subdivide Into 10 acre parcels. 
See view and close to ocean. 
Owner will carry back. 

EAST SOOKE 

Lovely «m> acres in ewcettortf built- 
up area. Wafer avertable. Sweep- 

WAYNB BUTTERFIELD. 3*3- 
361-4434 anytime 


1&W. 


COUNTRY LOTS 

*/i to 1 acre lets In the area of 
prestigious nomas at a realist 
IC price ef *332400 end up A 
golfers paradise Willy or Ade 
line 477^776* or 477 85*2 off, 
CAPITAL CITY REALTY LTD. 

THE BEST f 

Lovely wafer view let near 
Mill Bay Qvtr an acre. MLS 
GRAE LANGSTON 78*8596 
- CAPITAL CITY REALTY LtO. 
LTD M8-79S7. 


bv carport, can ba built. Excellent! Roval Trust 3*4-8001. 
opportunity’ ter bulr 


ER VtER 479-1581 or 


$29,900 . 318-47*3. 3iSS75. 


.MAGNIFICENT LAKEFRQN 

llot. 1-3 acre, truly beautiful view, 
‘ nd for the future. It’s 


- - - - _, invest In lend for the futur* 

CADBORO BAY — VISTA BAY batter thbn gold. 65B8846. 

SrnTSJ SSWc.«5? ffv 1 jliy tul T ,f^l. E r*l ^ l "l.r* i5'*w 


llY OWNER, F' 


... 

cul-de-sac. Off Reynolds Rd.. "«»r wn *** tw * q * > _ 

Quadra. Flexible terms, $78.500,1 SOOKE 4 AT TRACTIVE WOOD- 
368-5454 or 386-1249. , «d proetrtles, 2 to J acres, from 


$27,600. *42-5508. 


I* LOTS CENTRAL SAANICH ______ 

Sewer^ undenjround services 71061 ONg HALF ACRE. LAKEFRONT 
to 99001 sq. ft. Asking $23,000. Bill ^op^y _ Florence Lake. Offer*. 
AAcCARTER, 597 3970, or HEN- 1 m ui w between 9 Slid 5. 

DE RSON REALTY. 369-9741 . T _ ,f ! 0 J-- 

nl APFROXIMATFLY M^ACRE 

47roK43. 

"witS 


BEAUTIPyL _■ 

I49.50P Bvron Price 
SOCietM. 38S-24S6. 


ROCKLAND - LOT, 


| BY OWNER. 4.6 ACRES. 

larqn barn, asking $70,000. *78-0563 




RICHARDS - On August 31, 1978, 
at tna Royal Jubnee Hospital, 
John Lesley Richards, aged 77 
ysars. of 217-443 kuperw ot. He 
Is survived bv his loving wHe 
Olive at tne residence. Mr R'Ch¬ 
ard* was associated with th* 
Salvation Army Harbour Light 
He served oversees during World 
war ) and World War ?. and 
was a member of the R.C.L., 
Fro-Patrla Branch 

rm, >,v 1 Funeral *arylca will be held on 

«rfi«arv sah 

■ ■ McCall Bros , with Brigadier T. 

Smith ef the Salvation Army of 
ficialing. (Flowers gratefully de 
dined, friends so wishlnq m#y do 
nate to the Salvation Army, Her 
7*9 Pandora Avt,. 


5 LOTS FOR 
$27,000 

qy 

near 

vwwt „ __ 

will consider saillna in group of 2 
end 3 tots or buv the whole lot of 
lots for only 827,000. Ooen to 
offers. ML. 

„ . WALLY MICHAELS 

4774141 477-481*'Victoria, B.C.! 


THE PERMANENT 


15 ACRES 

_ .. _. Large 

ture. magnificent stands of fir 
cedar, over 700 ft. level 

■ ‘ far- “ 


SALTSPRTNG 

WATERPRONT 

2.3 mHas from Fulford Har¬ 
bour on 2.9* acre*. Mature 
property with 2-bdrm. horn# 
and eutbulldings. Great views. 

r&r,w$v"' r ‘“^y 

CAPITAL CITY REALTY LTO. 


- Suddenly on Augi 
at the Rryel JuL>l 


la* 


beach, fantastic views, on water 
svskam. SupertatUfe property 
<775.060 F.P. Call Joan McLeod 
(eves. 24643751 or B«»d Johnstone 
(eves. 74*.5274). Peerson-Johnstone 
and Associates Ltd., Parksvflle, 
B.C. 248- 321*. ___ 

H>/8 ACRE HOBBY FARM 
sal# bv owner, 3 bedrooms, 2 bath, 
mobile home, drilled wiw. *5 me- 
ture fruit trees 9 acre# loam sell, 
remainder fir and pine trees, near 
Qudicum Beach. $83,966. 752-330* 
■ *. 


MAYNb ISLAND 

1 acre-gentle stope-gqpd huitdln 
tot-pare and water OK-ohe bloc 
from water end beach access- 

T. L. Mann t Auodnaa LM. 1 


MARBLE BAY 

Furnished or unNurnished 2-bed- 
room mobile on Vi-acre. Good well, 
utility shed, garage. Low down 
oevment. Owner will finance. 
386-9474. 


OUALtCUM LOT IN EAG- 
lecrest subdivision Close te 
beeches and oolf courses Very 
wen priced #t $18,500 Please call 
Murray R- Dawson. 752 3474 
34l41Sw " S 


MAYNE ISLAND 
Drastically reducad to claar as- 
fate. 12 park-like acras. tabyloue 
view of Active Feu. boat basin 10 
minutes away. Ideal for retreat or 

(iV/lWSWa ‘ “ 


SMITH - 
31st, 1971, _ 

Hospital, Mrs. Thelma Louise 
Holland Smith, born in Victoria, 
B.C. end a resident of Victor, j 
ell her ilia, late raeldenci I5ic 
Derie St. She leaves her loving 
husband. Clifford C Smith, sons, 
Lynn T. and daughter-in-law, Pa¬ 
tricia; Paul C. and daughter-in 
law, Rhonda. Phillip and John 
Paul; she ajso leaves her loving 
daughters, Adrienne C. D., Pame¬ 
la D. and Monica all of Victoria 
and her beloved *—- 
Cadre Louise and 
and Teresa end Rl- 

l,Sm5* *&%ro£2rz 

Ct.imes" on Wednesday, Sep¬ 
tember *th, 197* at 3:06 p.m. Cra- 

BANOS — VICTORIA 


t water 
33M113. 


999-8 


DENMAN ISLAND 58 ACRES, 
former riding school, excellent rid¬ 
ing. fiahlng, oysters, superb moun¬ 
tain view, oc«en front, spacious. 
o»der home. Abundant 
8187,06 6. Ranch* A leg Ha 

MUDGE ISLAND. .*8 ACRE. 100' 
watertrontag# Southern exposure 
A greet beech. Must $*n 753-53*5 
(Nanaimo) aventngs 

RUXTON ISLAND' SOUTHERN 
exoesure VoOr own point and no 
‘ >0 u r s 400' waterfront 
Nanaimo) oventnos. 


SELL IT 


FAST 


THROUGH 


CLASSIFIED 


DIAL 386-2121 


TOUNGER — In Victoria. B.C . on 
August 91 *t. 1971, Mrs. Kattv 
ervn# J. Younger, aged 53 veers, 
late residence, 99 Dorothy Lane. 

ffiSssS-, auKToK: 
r»li ' 


BumebY. B.C.i mother. Whit* 
Rock, B.C.; sister*, M*r*aret 
Prlnc* George, *.C. end Norma 
Fulford. Gulf % Islands, end 
brother, Ralph, Calgary 
Service in the Sends Chapel ef 
Heather. Cotwood.B. C on Tues 
dev. Soptembor 3th. 197* et l 00 
p.m. Rev. John Bell offlctahna 
Flowers gratefully declined Those 
so desiring may contribute to the 
Victoria Cancer Clinic, 1900 Fort 
St., Victoria. E C. 

SANDS - COLWOOO 


S 

















































































































































































































/ 


•18 t>All ^ COLONIST, \ idona. B 1 . SjiurdJA. Vpirmlier. 


\%b 


\ 


BEFORE... 



Marc Hazebrouck 



Jesse Bolt 



Caynood-Moore 


Isn’t that 
whatsisface 
on stage? 


ATLANTA (UPI) — Sandwiched among the cotton 
candy stands, livestock exhibits and popcorn ven¬ 
dors, Danny O'Day unveiled his $500,000 “travelling 
clone show” Friday 

“Now Elvis over there is our biggest attraction,” he 
said, pointing to an impersonator of the late singer 
“You know how people are about Elvis. We even 
have a female Elvis. The sex doesn't matter.” 

O’Day is a 30-year-old, fast-talking promoter who has 
invested “at least" $500,000 into what he jokingly 
calls “my travelling clone show.” Appearing under 
the banner “Rock ‘N Roll Heaven,” it features five 
singers who hope to turn borderline professional 
careers into instant successes by impersonating 
dead singers.The impersonators are Mona 
Cay wood-Moore. Marc Hazebrouck. Jesse Bolt. Erin 
Rhyne, and Duke O’Connell. 

On the very day his new proteges appeared. O'Day 
heard from an old one. Dennis Wise, who under 
O'Day's managership had his face remodelled ear 
lier this year to look like Elvis Presley, filed suit 
against O'Day 

In a $2,500 lawsuit filed Thursday in Orange County 
Circuit Court, Wise claimed that his act has been da¬ 
maged. 

“(O'Day) ... has wrongfully, unlawfully and mali¬ 
ciously endeavored to destroy the plaintiff's career 
by creating an army of clones to undermine and to 
berate the plaintiff’s image ... diminishing the 
unique character and marketability of the plaintiff 
and his performances.” the suit said. 

The “unveiling” came when the five — Janis Joplin. 
Jim Croce, Jim Morrison and the Elvis’ — appeared 
during the Southeastern Fair and took off masks to 
reveal what plastic surgery can do to make one look 
like someone else. 

It was the first of a series of promotional appearances 
for the troupe which will be followed by a blitz of 
Europe — “where they really get off on this stuff,” 
said O’Day. 

Even before the group’s opening show, O’Day’s sing¬ 
ers acknowledged they have been criticized for 
trying to profit off someone else’s glory and accom¬ 
plishments. 

“A lot of people tell me it’s morbid to do something 
like this," said Mona Caywood Moore, a 27-year-old 
Californian who had plastic implanted in her cheeks 
to more closely resemble Janis Joplin, the raucous, 
gravel-voiced rock singer who died of a drug over¬ 
dose in 1971. 

“But I’m doing it out of respect, nothing else,” she 
said. “As far as I’m concerned what they show on 
the 6 o’clock nq*s is more morbid than what I'm 
doing 

“Why am I doing this? I'd be crazy to sit here and tell 
you I’m not doing it for money. Isn't everyone in 
entertainment out for the big bucks?” 

For 28-year-old Mark Hazebrouck. impersonating Jim 
Croce is simply a way of showing ’•espect for the 
famous balladeer and author of the hits “Bad, Bad 
Leroy Brown.” “I Have A Name” and "Don’t Mess 
Around With Jim.” 

But it is also, said Hazebrouch. a clear shot at the 
big time. “Let's face it. I’ll get exposure like I’ve 
never had before if the show is a hit." 


...AFTER 



Croce 



Presley 



Joplin 


Police 

fear 

losing 

sources 


TtNDMft FOR WATil FIR« 

SmM t•nder* will be eccepted tor 
th* tuocXv end delivery at on# true* 
loed of ductile iron w#»#r d*o* up to 
11 00 e.m . Wedne*dev. September 9th, 
197S Th# trucMoed it to contltt at 400 
feet of 4 Inch end the balance In 0-lnch 
diameter pipe Price# ere to be f o b. 
Victoria, F.S.T exempt, copper con- 
nectort not required, delivery Immedi 
ete 

The lowett nor env tender not necev 
ter IIv accepted 

Greater victoria Water Ofttrlct. 

479 Itlend Highway, 
victoria, 1C. V9B 1H7 


NOT ICC TO CRB Ol TORS 
AND OTHERS 
»the matter at the Ettetv at HELEN 
GERTRUDE HEWTON. late ef 
Victoria, Brlttth Columbia. Ob 


. jTlCE TO CREDIT 
RE THE ESTATE OP RICHARD 
GERALD GORE LANGTON late 
at me Eatt Saan.cn Read, R R 1, 


OTTAWA (CP) — Pro¬ 
posed freedom of information 
egislation threatens police 
effectiveness in fighting or¬ 
ganized crime and terrorism, 
police chiefs warned Friday. 

They urged the govern 
ment to increase, not de¬ 
crease. protection of confi¬ 
dential police information, 
saying U.S. police have vir¬ 
tually been put out of the 
terrorist-fighting business 
because of the American 
Freedom of Information 
Act. 

Gus Wersch, secretary- 
treasurer of the Canadian As¬ 
sociation of Chiefs of Police, 
said networks of police infor¬ 
mants could dry up entirely 
because of provisions of the 
Canadian Human Rights Act 
and the federal freedom of 
information proposals. 

Calling this an “urgent, 
growing and extremely seri¬ 
ous problem,” some 80 police 
chiefs attending the associa¬ 
tion’s annual convention un¬ 
animously adopted a resolu¬ 
tion urging the government to 
increase protection of confi¬ 
dential police information. 

Informers no longer talk to 
policemen because they are 
afraid their name will be 
made public if police files are 
released, Wersch, police 
chief in suburban Nepean, 
said in an interview. 






Invitation to Tender 

Seated Tenders, marked 
JANITORIAL SERVICES 
MINISTER Of HIGHWAYS 
COMPLEX 
2902 JeckHn Road. 

Victoria. B.C. 

tor a period of two (2) years will be 
received up lo 3 00 p m local time 
the 20th day of September, 1978, 
and thoae available at the time will 
be opened m public at 301 Man- 
lies Street. Victoria. B.C. V8V 
2G8 

Tendering document* may be 
obtained at the above addres* 
alter 9 00 a m. on the 28th day of 
Auguat. 1978 

Tender* muat be tiled on the 
forma provided, in sealed, clearly 
marked envelope* 

The lowest or any Tender will 
not necessarily be accepted 
H Crook 

Building Manager 


Senator gets backing 

Bryant defies 
death threats 


BOSTON (UPI) - Anita 
Bryant Friday endorsed 
Howard Phillips for the U.S. 
Senate and vowed not to be 
intimidated” by alleged 
death threats apparently mo¬ 
tivated by her much publi¬ 
cized fight against homosex¬ 
uality. 

A small group of well- 
wishers applauded Phillips. 
Miss/Bryant, her husband 
and manager Hubert Greene 
who were heavily guarded by 
police on arrival at Boston's 
Logan Airport. 

The Florida singer, who led 
a crusade in Miami to repeal 
a homosexual rights ordi 
nance, was to have appeared 
Friday at a Jundraisqig con¬ 
cert for Phillips. 

He is thought an underdog 
in the six-way Sept. 19 Demo¬ 
cratic primary for the nomi¬ 
nation for the seat held by 
Sen. Edward Brooke, R- 
Mass. 

The concert was camelled 
because of alleged threats on 


her life, said Phillips, who 
was a Republican when he 
joined the Nixon administra 
tion on orders to dismantle 
many of the federal govern¬ 
ment’s anti-pov^rly pro 
grams. He has since switched 
his party registration. 

Discussing the alleged 
bomb threats. Miss Bryant 
said, “I'm still human. It still 
bothers me. But it is not my 
nature to be intimidated. 

“We’ve endured it... What I 
don't understand are these 
people who talk about human 
rights when they deny me my 
freedom of speech.” 

Miss Bryant went to the 
Copley Plaza Hotel where she 
was to tape campaign adver 
tisements for Phillips, whom 
she had not met until Friday. 
Her husband said it was the 
first time she had endorsed a 
candidate. 

“I firmly believe in th#" 
man Howard Phillips. We 
stand together on the issues 
He is pro-family and pro¬ 
life.” Miss Bryant said. 


Manufacturer 
tax cut urged 


OTTAWA (UPI) - New 
Democratic Party leader Ed 
Broadbent Friday proposed a 
short-term industrial strat¬ 
egy that would cut manufac¬ 
turer’s sales tax and personal 
income tax, while increasing 
government spending on pub¬ 
lic works. 

Broadbent, outlining his 
party’s remedy for the coun¬ 
try’s high unemployment, 
ncar-10-per-cent inflation 
rate and faltering dollar, 
urged the federal govern¬ 
ment to take up the “eco 
.nomic slack” by reducing 
manufacturer’s sales tax 
from 12 to eight percent. 

The move would shave $1.5 


billion off government reve¬ 
nues but the lower prices 
would generate sufficient de¬ 
mand to create 75,000 jobs, he 
said. 

“A strong and growing 
manufacturing sector is ab¬ 
solutely essential to the fu¬ 
ture economic health of our 
country,” Broadbent said. 
“It is the catalyst which eco 
nomically can sustain growth 
in other sectors, for example 
services.” 

He said the sales tax break 
would benefit consumers by 
reducing the cumulative 
“pyramid” costs of distribu 
tion. 





f) 

'XL. 


• • © 


A**’ !! 

/mjL ^ 

t h idU 

FANTASTIC! 
Village Antique Auction 

SALE OF SALES 

FEATURES} Oak Renaissance. 10-piece Continental Dining Suite with Carved Front. Superb 
Wainut Chippendale-Style Desk with Leather Scribler. Superb Brass Bracket Clock. Regency-Style 
Credenza with Bow Glass Doors. Victorian Chaise Lounge »n Restored Condition. Superb Pair of 
Ruby Glass Lustres with Glass Prisms, Continental Three-Piece Sotl Suite with Twist Support Arms. 
Most Superb Continental Carved Oak Cabinet. Victorian Mahogany Grandfather Clock, Two Superb 
Pieces of Satin Glass. Victorian Walnut Sewing Cabinet. Selection of Two Walnut Coffee Tables. 
Completely rehnished. Continental Golden Oak Dining Suite. Oriental Ginger Jar with Iron Red 
Dragon Decor. Selection of Victorian Restored Bedroom Chairs. Dressers. Sets of Dming Chairs. 
Selection ol China Cabinets. Crystal Bedroom Lamp. Selection of Royal Doutton Toby Jugs. Fine Pair 
of Oriental Cloissone Vases. Washstands. Linen Cabinets. Selection of Commodes. Collectable 
Wedgewood Biscuit Barrel. Victorian Mahogany Bow Glass China Cabinet. Selection of Crystal 
Vases, Decanters and Wine Glasses. Selection of Royal Doutton Vases and Jardenierres. Selection 
otOak. Walnut and Mahogany Bedroom and Diningroom Furniture of every Description. Selection of 
Reproduction Victorian Walnut Furniture. Superb Victorian 3-Bottle Cruet Sets. Oak Wall Clocks. 
Selection of Brass Decor Items. Oriental Satsuma Vase, Canadian Overlay Cranberry Brides Basket. 
Kutam Vase 

SALE DAYS: WEDNESDAY. SEPT. 6th at 7:30 P.M. 
THURSDAY, SEPT. 7th at 7:30 P.M. 


PREVIEW: WEDNESDAY — SEPT. 6th from 
NOON UNTIL SALE TIME 7:30 P.M. 


PLACE: VILLAGE AUCTION LTD. 

eee Vate* Street 

Victoria, B.C_382-3242, 


Invitation to Tmdrr 

Seeled Tender*, marked 
JANITORIAL SERVICES 
SIB Rendrey Street. 

Victoria. S.C. 

tor a period of two (2) year*, 
will be received up to 3 00 p m 
local time me 20m day of Septem¬ 
ber. 1978. end those available at 
that lime* will be opened m public 
at 301 Menzie* Street. Victoria, 
B.C . V8V 2G8 

Tendering document# may be 
obtained at the above addrees 
alter 9:00 a m on the 26m day of 
August. 1978 

Tender* must be Wed on the 
forms provided, in seated, dearly 
marked envelope# 

The lowest or any Tender wt* 
not ncessertly be accepted 


NOTICE Is hereby given that Credl 
tor* end others having claim* egeimt 
the estate of the above named deceased 
ere hereby required to send them to the 
undersigned Executor #t 1057 Fort 
Stroet. victoria, BC , before the 2nd 
dev of October. I97S. after which date 
the Executor will distribute the said 
Estate among the parties entitled 
thereto, having regard to the claims of 
which it then he* notice 

MONTREAL TRUST 
COMPANY 
Executor 
Bv its solicitors, 

Messrs. LISSON, McCbNNAN, BION. 
O'CONNOR S PETERSON 


NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN th#t 
creditors end others having claims 
against the estate of the above named 
deceased ere hereby required to send 
particulars of such claim* to the under 
signed Executors at P O Box 540. Vic 
tori*. B.C VSW TPS. before the 27th 
dev of September 1971, after which 
date the Executors will distribute the 
said estate amongst th# persons epti 
tied thereto, having regard only to the 
claim* of which they shell then have 
had notice 

DOREEN GORE LANGT 
ROYAL TRUST C0*POR 
OF CANADA 
Executors 

Bv Creese & Company, 
their Solicitor* 


„„6ton end 
Aporation 


AUCTION - TUESDAY 7 P.M. 

ON VIEW ONE MY ONLY — MT OF MU 


r FURNISHINGS: Oak Dining Ste. with Refractory Table. Uph 
Oak Chair & Rocker. Coombes 2 pee Chesterfield Ste . Smalt & 
Bo yes Chesterfield & Loveseat. Fr. Prov. Style Occasional 
Chairs. Wal Occ Tables. Corner Cabinet. Oak Dresser & 
Buffet. Patio Settee & Chairs. Many More Fine Quality Furnish¬ 
ings APPLIANCES: Viking 2-Door Frost Free Fridge. Sanyo 
Portable Dryer. Elec. Ranges MtSC.: Samsonite Luggage. 
Hosaier Kitchen, Henry Herbert Upright Piano. Kirby Vacuum 
JEWELRY: Approx 25 Lots ind Pocket Watches. Expensive 
Roiex Wristwatch. Estate Jewelry MUCH, MUCH MORE. 



L UN 


AUCTIONEERS and 
APPRAISERS LTD. 
926 Fort St., Victoria 
Tel. (604) 386-3308 


SHERIFFS 

SALE 

Under and by vtrtu* of a Wnt of 
Seizure *nd Sale against me 
goods and chattels of 
♦ve Elite 
purported to be 

One (t) 1973 Plymouth. Sana! 

• RH41Q3R217379 

I nave aeized end wW otter tor 
•ale by public suction at Totem 
Towing. 3321 Tennyson A ve 
Victoria. BC on Friday, the 8m 
day of Septembers 1978 at the 
hour of 10:00 o dock in the fore¬ 
noon aM the right, title and interest 
the defendant has m the vehicle 
The vehicle may be viewed al 
3321 Tennyson Ave.. Victor^ 
B C between the hours of 8 00 
a m and 6:00 p m Monday to 

R T2m* of Seie on a whme £ •• 
is bests, cash P*ua 6* Sale* 

Ta por further particulars apply to 
the otfics of the undersigned 
W A Lee. 

Sheriff 

Vancouver Island 
Region No 1 




British Columbia Buildings Corporation 

Invitation to Tender 

Sealed Tenders, marked 
ALTERATIONS 
2*31 Douglas Street, 

Victoria, B.C. 

will be received up to 3:00 p m. local time the Uth 
day of September, 1978, and those available at that 
time will be opened in public at 301 Menzies Street, 
Victoria, B.C., V8V 2G8. 

Tendering documents mav be obtained at the 
above address after 9:00 a m. on the 1st dav of 
September, 1978. 

Tenders must be filed on the forms provided, in 
sealed, clearly marked envelopes 

The lowest or any Tender will not necessarily be 
accepted. 


-SpecialOffef- 

FOR PRIVATE PARTY 
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISERS 

Use this handy coupon to place your 
Classified Advertisement and save money 


Name 

Address 


Phone No 


Signature — 

No. of insertions . 


■ Amount Enclosed $ 


nu OUT AND MAIL TO 

SPECIAL OFFER 
Victoria Press, 

P O Box 300. 
Victoria. B.C. 

VBW 2N4 


DELIVER IN PERSON TO 

2621 Douglas St., 
Victoria. B.C. 


Your ad will run as soon as possible upon receipt of this coupon and payment or please 
specify consecutive dates a 


Classification Number 


10 WORDS MINIMUM 


10 

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Wards ter 1 msortion is The Daily Colon i st and Vkteria Timet: 

12« for each additional word 


Wards far 3 insertions is Th# OaRy Colonist and Victoria Timet: 

28C tor each additional word 


20 

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45C tor each additional word. 

Victoria Press Box Charge $3.25 per month. 
Replies to be mailed Replies to be held for pickup. 


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and run on consecutive days. 

All real estate, mobile home, rental and business advertising Is considered to be 
commercial advertising and will not qualify tor this special offer 

SEND CHEQUE or MONEY ORDER 

-NO REFUNDS- 


THE DAILY COLONIST 
AND VICTORIA TIMES 


'tl 


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/ 


DAILY COLONIST, Victoria, B.C., Saturday, September 2. 1978 39 


King Fisherman 


Big derby 
bn today 


The Etquimalt Anglers’ 
Association Jubilee Salmon 
Derby starts this morning at 
6 a m and ends at 3 p m 
Monday. Prizes and consola 
tion draw will be at 7 p.m 
Monday at the clubhouse. 

King Fisherman weigh-in 
stations are reminded that all 
entry forms for fish caught In 
August should now be in the 
mail to the Colonist King 
Fisherman Contest, or they 
may be left o(M of the August 
hidden weight draws and 
fishing awards 

latest King Fisherman en 
tries: 

TYM 

Kmf COW Stfrl 

Stuart Rotor*, Courtanav; 33 7, 
Kino Coho Resort, Buzz Bomb 

Lee Lund. Comox; 35.14. mouth of 
1 <ttie River, Buzz Bomb. 

The FtoMn' Mete 

Bob Simoson, 31 0, 31.1, 34 0. 341, 
34 o, 34 0, Mootka Sound. Minnow Teas 

er. 

Matthew Simpson, 30 0. 34.1 341 
34 o Nootka Sound, Minnow Teaser 

SPUING (CHINOOK) 


John Cox, Edmonton; 210. Secretary 
island. Strip Teaser 


Robert Mashtw, Edmonton. ARwr 
ta 33 0. Church Rock, Strip Teaser 
John Murphy. M 12. IS. 13. Race Pas 
taoe, anchovy 

Ooue Regimbal. 201. 5.1 Peddar 
Bav kelp bed. Buzz Bomb 
Glenn Crebe; 22 0, Peddw Bav kelp 
bed anchovy. 

Mike Ketlv; 5.1 
bed. Pirken lure 
Anne Dawe; 23 0, 44. 
kelp bed, Strip Teaser 
Gary Tomlinson, Kamloops; 11 5.1 
S O, Race Passage. Pirken lure. Stkig- 
siide. 

Andy Stephen. Sooka; 7.0,* 0. Peddar 
Bav, fiuu Bomb 

E. H. Creed; 11 Race Passage. 

hootch*#. 

M. G. Human; 1.1 14. Peddar Bav 
kelp bed. Buzz Bomb. 

Paul Dee I man, 7.0, Peddor Bav kalo 

bed. Pirken lure. 

Sammy Schwartz, Sidney; 21.0. Race 
Passage, Strip Teaser. 

Jim Cuthbert; HO. Church Reck. 

anchovy. 

Bill Tomlinson; 11.4, Race Passage. 
Pirken lure 

jeft Tomlinson; It. 11 Rees Pas 
saoe, Pirken lure. 

David Tomlinson. Kamloops, * o. 
10, 5 0. Race Passage. Pirken lure 
George WiNdneon; 0.1 Redder Bey, 

anchovy. 

Mika Kelly, NS Redder Bay kelp 
bed. Pirken lure. 

Ken Buffem, Br e ntwood Bay; 7.1 
sockeva. Padder Bay kalp bad. Buzz 

Bomb. 

G. Peersan S O. Redder Bay kelp 

bed. Buzz Bomb 

Leo Bemder. 10. Race Rocks. Pir¬ 
ken lure 

Dick Bradley; 12 I. Strip Teaser 
Bill Mundie, HO, 01. Redd* Bay. 
Pirken lure. 

Shigefw Adaghi 27 0. Church Rock.' 

anchovy. 

a I Rizzto; 21.0. Peddar Bay ke*> bed. 

anchovy. 

f red Pritchard; S I. Redder Bay kalp 
bed, Pirkan hire 

M. G Robmson; 0.0. Redder Bay. 

StmgsiMa. 

Gary Tomlinson. Kamloops; 30 0. 
7 1S0. Race Rocks. Stingsikto 
Pat Tomlinson. 60. 6.1 60. Race 
Rocks. Peddar Bay kelp bed. Pirken 

lure. 


verne Strickland; 24.12, Albert 
Heed. Super Strip Teaser 


Alaska 
pipeline 
in doubt 



McMorren'S Resort Mate! 

Sharon McMorran; 5 13, Hugh s Pas 
sage 

C mr»o Pnua * *- a -OpnrAPP (toNea 

k. drtgr ujft mwi inb vhv avgnwt 

William Johnson. North vancouvar. 
310. Land s End. Herrinp Strip. 

Tsartsltp Boat Ramp 

Garry Engtl. 254. f 
Tom Mack Spoon. 

George Hotenchukj HS, 14. Canoe 
Cove, minnow. 

Tony GIN. 24114.11 


Darrell A. Tang. 6.1,64, Bamberton, 
minnow 

Ron Efcttromj 14 0. B a mba rt o n , 

Tomic Plug. 

R. D Whlta; 244. Brentwood Bay. 
•trip Teaser 

H. A. P. McAdom; HO. Bamberton. 


The Riskin' HeN 

Bob Simpson, 211 Nootka Sound 


L. J. Lane; 14. Black Point Pink 


W w Fink; 74, Bamtteid 
R. K. Harkar; 20 0, Bamfiatd, an 
chow 

E. G. Harvav; 24.1. Capa Baala. 


Ron Atchison, Lake Cowtthan 23 0. 
Barkley Sound, Flaahtait 


Mike Seggle; Nanaimo; 161. Ten 
Mile Point. Strip Teaser 
Clev Corner; 214. Ten Mile Point, 
Strip Teaser. 

Dave Lobb, *4,14.1 Tan Mila Point, 
Strip Teasar. 

Met Smith; 11 San Matw Bay, Pir¬ 
ken lure. 

Kli»t Coho R etort 

V. H Faoem. Courtenay; 27.0, Mack 

buoy, herring. 

Lou Goulet . Courtenay; 144,1121.0. 
King Coho, Buzz Bomb 
Mkrvin King. Lazo. 21.12. King Ceho. 
Pirkan. 

Don Grim way, Vancouver; 121 
King Coho, silver hootch* 

Gerald Pederson. Courteney. 21.1 
mouth ot Little River. Buzz Bomb. 

N Demedash, Comox. 21.1 21.11 
Buzz Bomb. 

G k woods. Courteney; HI Kino 
Coho, Herring Strip. 

Zuiderzee Campsites 

Danny Pace, 0.2. Y| 
gerine lure 

Murdock pace; 44. Yellow Point. 
Hunger ine lure 


E R Smith; 24 0. Shatter Point, 
orange Achon Flashtail. 


King Cent Reserf 

G. M Durmsaaeu; 912. King Coho. 
Strip Teaser 

Bab Arsenere, Laze; 10. King Coda. 
Buzz Bomb 

Joanne Wiseman. Como*; S I. King 
Coho, Strip Teaser 
John Gould. Oxbridge. Ont ; S I, 
King Coho, Buzz Bomb 
Graeme Rick son, Como*; 0.1. King 
Coho. Buzz Bomb 
Erik Minty, Surrey; SO. 


L. J Lane; 7.4,10.10. Black Point. 
Pink Shrimp. 

China Creek Marme 

Mel Smith, 71. San Mateo Bay Pir¬ 
ken lure 


Derek Gate I I. Cordova Spit Sting- 


verne Strickland, 5.4. Alban head 
r Strip Teaser 


Gary Tomlinson. Kamloops. 7 0,5.1 
Race Rocks. StingsiWa 
Shigehn Adaghi; 6.1 Church Rock, 


L Strip T« 


Gordon Wllliscrott; 7 2, Otter Point. 
Tom Mack. 


Homes 

plan 

ready 


Applications under the 
provincial government’s 
family first—home pro¬ 
gram will be accepted as 
of next week. Municipal 
Affairs and Housing Min¬ 
ister Hugh Curtis said 
Thursday 

Since the program was 
announced last spring 
there have been 7.000 in¬ 
quiries about when it 
would come into effect. 

“Benefits under the 
program will be retroac¬ 
tive on all new or used 
homes including mobile 
homes and condomin¬ 
iums purchased on or 
after April 11, 1978," 
Curtis said. 

’•Those eligible for the 
program will be families 
with a dependent child 
under the age of 19 yean 
who are purchasing their 
first ever home. This in¬ 
cludes single parents and 
adoptive families.” 

Two options are open to 
applicants—either a 
maximum grant of $2,500 
to be applied to reduce 
the mortgage, or $52.50 a 
month for five yean to 
assist in meeting mort 
gage payments. The 
choice is up to the appli¬ 
cant. 

Under the rules the 
maximum grant cannot 
exceed more than 20 per 
cent of the total value of 
the house 

Curtis said that in the 
queries received so far 
the $52.50 a month option 
appears to be preferred 
to the outright grant. 

Application forms are 
available at all govern¬ 
ment agents offices 
throughout the province 
and the ministry of hous¬ 
ing’s regional offices in 
Vancouver. Victoria. 
Cranbrook, Kelowna and 
Prince George. 


RENTAL BREAK FOR SENIORS 


has raised the celling on rent 
niaximums under which se 
nlor citizens can apply for 
rental assistance under the 
Shelter Aid for Elderly 
Renters (S.A.F.E.R.). 

Under the old formula a 
senior citizen could only use 
the first $175 of the monthly 
rent when calculating the 
S. A.F.E.R. entitlement. 
Under the new formula the 
first $205 can be used. 

Municipal Affairs and 
Housing Minister Hugh 
Curtis said that an estimated 
90 per cent of all single senior 
citizen renters pay rents 
below that figure 
, For couples the S A F E R. 


Labor issues 
serious 
says Sanford 


Karen Sanford (NDP— 
Comox) said Friday that 
rapidly deteriorating labor- 
management relations were 
the most serious issues facing 
B.C. this Labor Day. 

She said that where 
progress was being made "in 
building whole^aone and 
fruitful labor-management 
relations there are now ap¬ 
pearing attitudes of hostility 
and distrust. No one can fail 
to recognize these signs of 
deterioration.” 

Sanford said if the trend 
continues "the collective bar¬ 
gaining process ... and fair 
employment practices will be 
endangered.” 

The statements were made 
in her official Labor Day 
message. 


Ancient tomb 
discovered 

ATHENS (AP) — A Greek 
archeologist says the disco¬ 
very of a second tomb in the 
Vergina mound in northern 
Greece indicates the site was 
a royal cemetery for ances¬ 
tors of Alexander the Great. 


ceiling Is raised to the first 
$225 of their monthly rent. 

Curtis said the changes 
should provide a rent grant 
boost of about $20 a month. 

As an example, a senior 
citizen receiving Just over 
$300 a month and paying rent 
of $200 a month will now be 


entitled to more than $80 in 
S.A.F.E.R. benefits, an in 
crease of $20 over present 
rates. 

The Increases became ef¬ 
fective Sept I. 

The S.A.F.E.R. program 
came into being in July of 
1977 and Is expected to cost 


the taxpayers about $10 mil 
lion in the current fiscal 
year. 

Approximately 11,000 se¬ 
nior citizens benefit from 
S.A.F.E.R. The higher ceil¬ 
ing K expected to add a fur¬ 
ther 2,000 recipients to the 
list. 


Senior citizens not sure of 
their status should contact 
the S.A.F.E.R. office, min¬ 
istry of municipal affair* and 
housing, the legislative build¬ 
ings, or the B.C. Housing 
Management Commission in 
Vancouver. 


SUMMER CLEARANCE 

PRICES EFFECTIVE TIL SEPT. 16th 


B.C. weighs bids 
on new ski plans 


J*nwi McDonell. Duncan. 34, Cowt- 
eftan Laka. Daadlv Dick. 


Environment Minister 
James Nielsen announced 
two bids for the development 
of new ski facilities in the 
Whistler Mountain area at a 
press conference Friday 

The bids came from Black- 
comb Skiing Corp. and For¬ 
tress Mountain Resorts. 

Details of the bids were not 
made public but Nielsen said 
they were expected to be in 
the $8 million bracket. 

The bids will now ba 
studied and an announce¬ 
ment made at a later date. 

Fortress Mountain is Cal¬ 
gary based and owned jointly^ 
by the Federal Business De¬ 
velopment Bank and the 
Aspen Ski Corp. of Colorado. 

Blackcomb is a Vancouver 
based consortium spearhead¬ 
ed by Ken Farquarson. 


The development proposals 
call for a multi-lift system to 
service approximately 1.220 
vertical metres of ski trails. 

They do not include accom¬ 
modation for skiers. Any fur¬ 
ther accommodation facili¬ 
ties would be built in Whistler 
itself with the local council 
responsible for all develop¬ 
ment. 


Pre-Paated 
Vinyl Coated 


Wallpaper! 

M A While Quantities Last M QQ 

° bolt 10 4* 0.0 


Strippabl® 


20% OFF 

BRUSHES and 
ROLLERS 


EX LO-LUSTRE 

ALKYD 

12 ” 


Reg. 15.95 gal. For wood, 
stucco, masonary hornet. All 
colors. 


DISCONTINUED 
COLORS IN 

MARINE 

ENAMEL 

50% OFF 

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WASHINGTON (CP) — 
The W'hite House said Friday 
. it cannot elaborate on Presi¬ 
dent Carter's prediction that 
the fate of the proposed Alas¬ 
ka highway gas pipeline 
might depend on whether hi* 
proposed energy legislation 
passes Congress. 

A White House spokesman 
fcaid Carter, in separate 
meetings Thursday with 
state governors and business¬ 
men. said it Is unlikely the 
pipeline might be built if the 
energy legislation does not 
pass. Carter held the meet¬ 
ings as part of a campaign to 
put pressure on Congress to 
approve the legislation. 

The reference to the pipe¬ 
line, the spokesman said, was 
only one of many harmful 
effects that Carter said would 
result from defeat of the 
complex energy legislation 

A U.S. energy department 
official said later that the ra¬ 
tionale for the president’s 
brief comment is that without 
adequate pricing arrange¬ 
ments the pipeline sponsors 
vs ill have serious difficulty 
getting financing for the Old- 
billion project. 

One provision of the huge 
package of proposed energy 
legislation would “roll In” 
the price of the Alaskan gaa 
w ith the prices of other natu¬ 
ral gas sold in the United 
States. Such rolllng-in would 
enable the higher-cost Alas¬ 
kan gas to compete with 
other gas. 

The 7,520-kilometre <5.999- 
mile) project, which was ap¬ 
proved in principle last year 
by both the Canadian and 
U.S. governments, haa fallen 
about aina months behind 
schedule. 


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40 DAILY COLONIST. \ ict or la. B C . Saiurdax . September 2, 197* 


Suds flow | CHARRON, LEVESQUE PATCH IT UP 


Breweries claim 
$50 million loss 


VANCOUVER (CP) — One brewery narrowly avoided 
closuw as a three-month strike-lockout at four other 
B.C breweries ended Friday. 

The four reopened their plants, saying they lost up to 130 
million In sales during the strike 

Beer was flowing from beer parlor taps across the prov 
ince as brewing rum panics dispatched their first domes 
ik suds from their plants since the labor dispute began 
May 26 

The beer was being produced by „ some of the 1.000 
union workers who gained five cents an hour over a 
contract offer they rejected in June 

Bottled beer, however, will not be moved into liquor 
stores until next week as the Liquor Distribution Branch 
moves to reduce some of its large stockpile of L\S. beer. 

The near closure of Prince George Brewery Ltd. came 
after the LDB issued a directive that all draft beer licence 
holders revert to the brands they were selling May 
25—one day before a strike began against Carling O’Kpefe— 
and retain those brands for 60 days. 

The Prince George operation was not open then, and 
consequently its accounts would have been returned to the 
Carling, Labatt and Molson breweries, said brewery presi¬ 
dent Bob NaismKh. 

Naismith said he contacted officials in Victoria Friday 
and the order was rescinded, allowing the brewery to keep 
the accounts 

Aside from the huge quantity of imported beer still In 
liquor stores, an estimated 500.000 dozen were in transit 
from various C.S. point*. 

LDB general manager Bob Wallace said that the branch 
was forced to place orders all over the l\S. to meet the 
demand and. in some instances, there was a 12-day gap 
between order and delivers 

He said the branch hoped it could sell all its L'.S. beer be 
fore the breweries hit full stride in their bottled beer 
distribution in about a^week to 10 days. 

Wallace said beer consumption in B.C. was cut roughly 
in half during the brewery shutdown, but that the govern 
ment made up some of the lost revenue with higher import 
taxes on C.S. beer He said he did not know whether the final 
balance sheet would show the government lost revenue over 
all 

Hal Moran, Molson s regional v ice president and gen 
eral manager, said a big problem facing Molsons in its 
distribution of beer around the prov ince was the glut of U.S. 
beer in warehouses and liquor stores, which was blocking 
the Canadian product. 

Molson would start workers on a double shift Tueidav as 
production is geared up. he said. 

Bob Binnendyk. Labatt's B C. vice president and gen 
eral manager, said the company's three breweries—in 
New Westminster. Victoria and Creston—were sending 
draft beer out to hotels Friday and bottling lines had 
started up at all three 

Brewerv employees voted Wednesday to accept the 
companies offer for a contract providing wage increases 
•averaging up to $1.40 an hour over two years De 
spite the signing of the agreement Thursday, labor nego 
nations continue in the brewery industry 

John Langley, of the Canadian Union of United Brew 
ery. Flour. Cereal. Soft Drink and Distillery Workers. Local 
100. said the union must still negotiate a contract with 
beer distributors covering about 24)6 workers around the 
province Their last contract expired in April. 

✓ 

Bargaining also continues for about m foremen and 
clerical and lab workers at Carling O Keefe, the only 
brewery where supervisory personnel arc organized, said 
Bob Brennan, president of the* Assoc iation of Commer 
ciai and Technical Employees, Ixnel 17la. 


QUEBEC (CP) - Claude 
Charron. newly appointed 
House leader for the Parti 
QuebecoK in the national as 
sembly, says his relations 
with Premier Rene Levesque 1 
have improved after several 
years of tension 
Commenting in an inter 
v iew published Friday in the 
Quebec daily Le Soleil. Char¬ 
ron said his recent appoint 
ment puts the cap on a recon 


ciliation with Levesque that 
began slowly more than 2tl 
months ago. when the PQ 
won 71 of the 110 seat* in the 
assemble in the election of 
Nov 15. 1976 

Charron said he suffered a 
great deal from the “ten 
sions” and “altercations** 
that existed between Levev 
que and the half-dozen PQ 
members of the assembly 


when they were in opposition 
from 1970 to 1976 

“The remoteness of Mr 
I^evesque was the most nega 
tivc experience of my time in 
opposition.** he said. “We 
never saw him or. when we 
did. we became aware of our 
differences twice over 

'Whatever one thinks. I 
suffered from it. even though 
Pm the talkative type I 


didn't have the maturity I 

have today." 

Charron. now .11, said the 
problem was that he and 1* 
vesque. who did not have a 
seat in the assembly at the 
time, didn't have the opportu 
nity to worll together 
“We enlarged on our differ¬ 
ences over a particular bill 
Neither he nor 1 was willing 
to give 

‘Today. Mr. Levesque's 


role as leader of the cabinet h 
no longer that of rutting 
things fine, but rather of 
seeking a consensus. He lis 
tens and lete everyone 
speak 

“I’ve admired Him for 
these last 20 months ' 

Charron foresees no major 
problem itphis position as leg 
islative leader for the govern 
ment. 

As House leader, he says. 


he intends to promote and 
stabilize the reforming zeal 
of a “good goverment which 
wants to win the referen 
dam’’ 

POLONY 

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Colonist 


Showers , 
high 17 

Weather Detail 
oa Page 2 


No. 221 — 120th Year 


Vancouver Inland's leading newspaper since 1858 

Victoria, British Columbia, Saturday, September 2, 1978 


15c Daily, 30C Sunday' 


Jobless aid goes to job aid 



Cullen 

‘stop spoon-feed* 


OTTAWA (CP) - The fed 
eral government was 
damned and praised Friday 
for its proposals to reduce the 
number of unemployment in 
surance claimants by about 
10 per cent and to increase 
spending on job creation. 

Unemployment insurance 
slashes, at a time when a 
million are jobless, would be 
a “kick in the gut’* to the 
unemployed and to seasonal 
workers in the economically- 
depressed Atlantic provinces 
said Newfoundland Conser 
vative James McGrath. 

His Tory colleague. Sin¬ 
clair Stevens of Ontario, said: 
“Thank God they realize 
their unemployment insur¬ 
ance program is overly 
lax ” 

But he criticized the job 


$710 million slotted 
to create positions 


creation measures which 
would not be ready in time to 
help ease the anticipated high 
unemployment rate thin win¬ 
ter. 

Bud Cullen, federal minis¬ 
ter of employment, Friday 
announced proposals for 
sharp cuts in the unemploy¬ 
ment insurance program in a 
move “to stop spoon-feed¬ 
ing**.. 

The Cullen proposals would 
require legislation to become 
law. and bills probably woqld 
be introduced in the fall ses- 
Mon of Parliament, unless it 


was dissolved for a federal 
election. Parliament is to re¬ 
sume Oct. 10. 

He coupled his proposal for 
maior cost-cutting surgery 
on (he unemployment insur 
ance program with an an 
nouncement of plans to spend 
$710 mill jpn on jop-creation in 
the 1970-80 fiscal year. 

Hardest hit by the proposed 
changes to the unemploy 
ment insurance program 
would be young persons, sea¬ 
sonal workers and those re¬ 
turning to the labor force 
after a Jong absence Also 


penalized would be repeating 
claimants. 

Benefits would be reduced 
and the government also pro¬ 
poses,to mo\e toward ‘spe¬ 
cial recovery' from hlgh-in- 
come unemployment 
insurance claimants whose 
gross income, Including un¬ 
employment insurance, is 
more than $22,000 in any cal¬ 
endar year.” 

Cuts in the unemployment 
insurance program would re¬ 
sult in savings of $580 million 
in the 1979-80 fiscal year. Cul¬ 
len said. The $710 million to 
be set aside for employment 
strategy in that year “would 
come from $570 million in 
cash expenditures, $100 mil 
lion in foregone tax revenue 
and $40 million in unemplov 
Page 2—Cash-switch 


Oil fever grips market 
over Dome Arctic digs 


Canrfiait Brest 

Oil fever gripped the Toronto Stock 
Exchange Friday as shares of Dome 
Petroleum Ltd. and Gulf Canada Ltd . 
partners in Beaufort Sea exploration, 
traded at high levels. But the companies 
declined to comment on the significance 
of drilling in two wells. 

Trading in the shares of both com 
panies was halted for about two hours on 
the Toronto and New York exchanges 
The trading ban also was put on Dome 
Mines Ltd . a Toronto-based gold pro 
ducer and subsidiary of Dome Petro¬ 
leum. 

The Toronto 300 index made a record 
one-day jump of 22.80 points to 1255.01. 

The trading flurry- followed several 


days of rumors that Dome and Gulf had 
made a major find at their Kopanoar and 
Ukalerk wells In the Beaufort 
But Dome, in a prepared statement 
Friday, would only repeat what it an 
nounced a week ago—that its drills had 
uncovered hydrocarbon shows at both 
wells but more drilling would be re 
quired to “assess the size or commercia 
Illy of these hydrocarbon shows.’* 
in the same vein, a statement front 
Gulf said until both wells have reached 
their total depth of 11.000 feet and were 
logged and tested, “there is no basis for 
unusual market reaction.’’ 

Dome closed Friday on the Toronto 
Stock Exchange up $12 at $95 w hile Gulfs 
shares were up more than $ 5 . Dome 
Mines shares rose $ 12 . 


‘The young 15 BYELECTI0NS RULE 0UTBIG test? 

win get ‘Mini-vote’ set for Oct. 16 

clobbered’ 



Rondeau 

. visibly shaken 


Proposals by the federal government to make it 
more difficult to claim unemployment insurance were 
greeted by warnings from labor officials on Friday. 

In Vancouver, George Hewison of the United Fish¬ 
ermen and Allied Workers Union said changes in eligi¬ 
bility requirements for 
unemployment insurance 
will be devastating to 
young people entering the 
work force and to seasonal 
employees 

“Young people coming into 
the market, if they can’t find* 
a job—and let’s face it. there 
aren’t many jobs—will get 
clobbered. Women on season¬ 
al work, who don’t get that 
much work opportunity, will 
get clobbered too. ’ 

Jack Munro. president of 
the International Wood¬ 
workers of America, said the 
federal government should 
resign. 

“1 don’t believe how 
damned irresponsible this 
government can be." Munro 

said. 

Dave McIntyre, of the B.C. 
Federation of Labor, said the 
changes were dishonest and 
political manoeuvering. 

B.C.’s Finance Minister 
Evan Wolfe said while he is 
basically in favor of refine¬ 
ments to the unemployment 
insurance program, the cuts 
proposed by the federal gov¬ 
ernment will have a major 
impact on welfare pro¬ 
grams. 

*i am more interested in 
seeing what approach the 
federal government is devel 
oping towards cost-sharing 
programs.” Wolfe said 
In Toronto, the president of 
the Ontario Federation of 
Labor said proposed changes 
are nothing more than a 
political ploy that will appeal 
to society’s most negative 
forces. 

“The proposals show the 
government’s insensitivity to 
working people and to the 
young in this country,” Clif¬ 
ford Pilkey said in an Inter 
view Friday. 


MP found 
guilty 
of arson, 
conspiracy 



GRANBY. Quo. (CP) - In 
dependent Gilbert Rondeau 
became the first MP in 32 
years to be convicted of an 
indictable offence Friday, 
when he was found guilty of 
arson and conspiracy in con¬ 
nection with the burning of a 
building which HF mf!T£d.' 

The 30-year-old MP refused 
any comment, leaving the 
courthouse shortly after 
Judge Denis Bouchard, who 
heard the case without a jury, 
handed down his verdict and 
set a sentencing hearing for 
Sept It. 

Rondeau remains free until 
then, and his lawyers. Paul 
Lesage and Michel Robert, 
say it ia too early to decide 
whether they will appeal. 

An indictable offence, a 
legal category reserved for 
more serious crimes, refers 
to any offence punishable by 
at least two years in prison 
Rondeau faces a maximum 
penuity of 14 years. 

In a 67-page verdict that 
took 90 minutes to deliver. 

Page 2—Ml* guilty 


Severe quake 
hits Taiwan 

TAIPEI. Taiwan (UPI) - 
A severe earthquake hit 
northern Taiwan today and 
the weather bureau said the 
tremors were so strong that 
all its seismographs onJhe 
island were knocked out 

The bureau estimated the 
quake at six or more on ihe 
open-ended Richter scale. 


-Cotomst photo bv im McK«in 


LABA1TS WORKER Bill Dunaway inspects first bottled beer off to come off 
conveyor in brewery in nearly three months. But wait at store is not over. 

Return of a true 
Canadian spirit 


By DON COLLINS 


Inside 

McGeer stands firm 
on 'pot' teachers 

—Page 10 

Jubilee Derby 
starts today 

—King Fisherman. 3» 


Background 

5 

Bridge 

25 

Church 

12,13 

Classified 

25-37 

Comics 

23 

Crossword 

26 

Editorials 

4 

Entertainment 

26-22 

Family 

18 

Einance 

8.1 

King Elxherman 

* 31 

Marine Calendar 

22 

Provincial Court 

19 

Sports 

14-16 

Your Good Health 

IN 


Look no longer for that first concrete 
sign of a true Canadian spirit. 

It’s out there now in the pubs of the 
land, at the liquor stores, wherever thirsty 
men and women gather. 

“They were asking for Canadian draft 
beer today and some of them didn't like it too 
much when we said it wasn't in yet.” one 
Victoria hotel waiter said Friday night. 

It was a full day after the end of the 
three-month brewery shutdown and the pa 
triotic tastebuds were tired of waiting 

The first draft in a long time should hit 
the pubs today. But the news isn’t as good for 
those who want to buy bottled Canadian beer 
at the government-operated stores. 

Spokesmen for the liquor distribution 
branch say there is a week-to-10-day wait to 
clear the American stock, which is still 
coming In. and that it will probably take 
that long to get the Canadian bottled beer into 
full production again. 

That seems to come as a bit of a surprise to 
people like Robert Mussett. area manager 
for l^ibatt’s. He said no less than 20.000dozen 
bottles of Labatt’s were produced here Fri¬ 
day, but that it Is up to the branch to say 
where It Is to go. 

The first draft to grace the tables in 
Victoria today will come all the way from 
Vancouver. Until things get back to normal. 


• Breweries claim $56 million strike loss. 
Page 40 

the Labatt’s plant here is concentrating only 
on bottle beer, while Its New Westminster 
plants churning out draft. 

And what does the thirsty public think of it 
all? 

“Look.’’ said one beer drinker. “I’ve 
been drinking hard stuff all this time and that 
isn’t really the way 1 like tl. Normally I drink 
the kind of light stuff that is low on calories 
and alcohol content because of my weight 
You can only get it in Canadian stock. And 
how they’re going to keep pushing the 
American stuf( at me in the stores. This 
could mean war!" 

The boys down at the pub weren t talking 
war. . 

“Actually they’re going pretty good on 
what they can get tonight.” the waiter said. 
“But they know that tomorrow is another 
day. that the good old Canadian draft wilt 
be here again.” 

It seemed enough to make a Canadian 
swell with pride, until the waiter dropped one 
more line. 

“Sure they like the Canadian taste. But 
that’s not the main reason. The main reason 
is that they’re tired of paying $1.2$ a bottle for 
the imported stuff when they can normally 
get a glass of beer for 30 cents “ 

The Cahadian spirit, it seems, has a 
price tag 


OTTAWA (CP) - Prime 
Minister Trudeau called Oct. 

16 byelections Friday in 
seven vacant federal ridings, 
a move that could rule out a 
fall general election 
The date coincides with 
byeleclions in eight other 
empty seats, and Trudeau 
added in a prepared state 
ment that his government 
“Intends to proceed deter¬ 
minedly” with its current 
economy recovery program. 

But while the announce 
ment appeared to undercut 
the possibility of a general 
election this fall, opposition 
spokesman criticized Tru¬ 
deau for not making his in 
tentions more dear 
“As usual the prime minis 
ter is vacillating.’’ said NDP 
Leader Ed Broadbent 
There was still a possiblity 
Trudeau could return next 
Tuesday from his visit with 
the pope and announce a Nov. 

6 general election. 

Nothing of substance would 
be changed by the result of 
the byelections—Trudeau 
could not lose his majority 
even if he lost ail 15 seats 
The byelections would be 
cancelled if Trudeau calls a 
general election before Oct. 
16. But the byelection an 
nouncement appeared to 
make that possibility more 
remote, and a spokesman for 
the prime minister acknow¬ 
ledged there certainly 
wouldn’t be “an election at 
this time.” 

By law. Trudeau can wait 
another 10 months before he 
is forced to call a general 
election. But there has been 
speculation he might call a 
fall vote and spare candi¬ 
dates the trouble of running 
first in byelections and then 
in a general election a few 
months later. 

The prime minister made 
the announcement in a news 
release shortly before a trip 
to Rome to attend the instal¬ 
lation of Pope John Paul. 

Currently, the 15 vacancies 
mean more than a million 
Canadians have no MP. 

Chief Electoral Officer 
Jean-Marc Hamel said he is 
ready, but adds that the stop 
gap votes give rise to a num¬ 
ber of complications. 

The byelections would be 
fought on riding boundaries 


last used in the July 8. 1974 
election—boundaries that 
have since been changed 
under redistribution. 

Candidates nominated on 
the basis of new electoral dis 
trlcts may. in some cases, 
have to be renominated. And 
old party riding associations. 


disbanded after redistribu 
tion, would have to be re¬ 
formed to run the cam 
paigns 

The \acam ridings reach 
from Humber-St. George s- 
St. Barbe in Newfoundland in 
Burnabx Richmond Delta in 
British Columbia 


Trash can 
yields 
bank bonds 

VANCOUVER (CP) - 
An elderly man wearing 
tattered clothes was look¬ 
ing through garbage cans 
in the dty’s downtown 
district Friday when he 
discovered $500,000 in 
Royal Bank of Canada 
treasury bonds that could 
be cashed by the bearer. 

The unidentified man. a 
resident of a Salvation 
Army hostel. Immedi¬ 
ately turned in the five 
certificates worth $100.* 
000 each to a Royal Bank 
branch. 


No for Pierre 
may mean 
go for Socreds 

By JIM HI.ME 

rtorttr 

Is Premier Bennett waiting for Prime Minister Trudeau 
to make his move before deciding whether or not to call a 
fall provincial election? 

While Premier Bennett remains closed-mouthed on his 
election plans, he did change his hard-line “no election this 
year” stand during the taping of Capital Comment for Sun 
day viewing on CTV. 

Asked if there could be a fail election in B.C.. he was 
non-committal, repeating that there wen* several op 
lions — fall, spring, next fall. When asked if he would like 
to repeat earlier statements that he did not anticipate a 
provincial election this year, the premier slid off into a 
non-answer answer 

TRUDEAU HAS INDICATED that his final decision will 
be made over the Labor Day weekend. Premier Bennett 
refuses to give any indication of when his decision wilt be 

made. 

Close observers of the political scene appear evenly 
divided on the fall-versus-spring provincial election 

Spring supporters point to the premier's positive asser 
tions. repeated many times earlier this >ear. that he had 
no intention of calling an election in 1978. 

„ The fall supporters cite several ’ indicators:'' 

• The high profile of the premier in recent week* 

• A steady procession of government grants benefit 
ting most municipalities throughout the province. 

• High-profile cabinet ministers who instead of hand 
ing out press releases have suddenly started to hold press 
conferences. 

• Increased financial aid to senior citizens. 

” • The premier’s new stance on election timing, chang 
ing from “no” to “maybe.” 

ONE PROMISE BENNETT says he intends to keep is 
that there will be no winter election of his calling. 

Theiast provincial election was Dec. 11. 1975. 

If Trudeau decides to go to the polls in November, now 
his earliest possible date, there is little doubt that Ben 
nett will wait for spring. 

If Trudeau decides to wait till spring. B.C could go to 
the polls in late October. 

Munro enters 
airline dispute 


MONTREAL (CP) - 
Labor Minister John Munro’s 
intervention in the dispute 
between Air Canada and the 
union representing its 7,500 
ground-service workers 
raised new hope for a settle¬ 
ment Friday in a conflict 
which had seemed dead¬ 
locked beyond solution for 
more than a week 

Air Canada president 
Claude Taylor issued a state 
ment an hour after Munro'* 
announcement, saying he 
welcomed “the willingness of 
the federal minister of labor 
to become involved in an ef¬ 


fort to resolve the current 
contract dispute .” 

The International Associa 
tion of Machinists, for its 
part, said It would try to find 
three more representatives 
from its Montreal local to fill 
the vacancies left on the na¬ 
tional negotiating committee 
by the resignation of previous 
Mofitreai-area bargainers. 

The news from Ottawa, 
calling both sides to a meet 
ing in the capital Sunday 
morning, came just as IAM 
negotiators were on the verge 
of leaving Montreal in de¬ 
spair to return home for the 
long Labor Day weekend 


u-*; 



























6 DAILY .COLONIST, Victoria. B.C., Saturda>. September 2, 197* 


Storm brewing over availability of groundwater 


A>torm is brewing in North 
Saanich’s exclusive Ardmore 
district over the availability 
of groundwater, a reliable 
source on the Saanich Penin¬ 
sula said Thursday 

More than 300 families live 
in the area in homes up to 
$ 100 , 000 . 

In 1963-64 the area organ 
i/ed to create the village of 
Ardmore, but the idea was 
shot down by the provincial 
administration of W.A.C. 
Bennett. 

In 1965, local ratepayers 
told the municipal affairs 
ministry they didn’t want 
outside water service and 
would rely on their own 
wells. 

The area is still on record 
as favoring its own indepen¬ 
dent water supply. 

Residents feel they have 
plenty of groundwater and 
don’t need the new pipeline 
carrying Sooke Lakes water. 

But two monkey wrenches 
were recently thrown into 
the works, the source said. 

• A $3 million provincial 
capital-interest grant thi$ 
week brought the reality of a 
permanent Saanich Peninsu¬ 
la water line a little closer 
Regional planning provides 
for a 12-inch main from the 
line to serve the Ardmore 
area within the next decade. 

• Last summer a 568-foot 
well drilled by a local com¬ 
pany on a 50-acre property on 


Island 

school 

picked 

COURTENAY—A junior 
high school here has been se¬ 
lected as one of six in B.C. 
chosen for inclusion in the 
^energy audit program ad¬ 
ministered by the B.C. en¬ 
ergy Commission. 

The selection of Courtenay 
lunior high school for inclu¬ 
sion in the program was an¬ 
nounced by W. L. B. Hawker, 
vuperintendent of facilities 
sendees. 

In another project, the 
school district will be work¬ 
ing u ith the public health unit 
on a voluntary pilot project at 
the new Highland school in 
L'omox. 

The project named Butt 
Out. will attempt to acquaint 
students with the health haz¬ 
ards associated with smok¬ 
ing. 

The program has been de¬ 
veloped by Action B.C. 


West Saanich Road owned by 
Vin Patterson, a building 
contractor, has made avail¬ 
able 206 gallons a minute and 
has been used throughout this 
summer for irrigating farm¬ 
land. 

Ardmore residents are 
alarmed that it's drawing out 
the groundwater at too rapid 
a rate. 

They’re also concerned be 
cause their own wells are 
about 200 feet deep. The 568- 
fool well is drawing water 
from below. 


The big well may be the 
third or fourth largest in B.C. 
and one of largest on Van 
ciouver Island. 

Patterson's property is at 
present rented by John Pen- 
dray of Saanich. Pendray has 
also purchased 85 acres ad¬ 
joining this 50-acre property. 

Pendray has started to 
move dairy cattle from his 
farm in the Blenkinspp Val¬ 
ley in Saanich onto the rented 
property. 

The 200 gallons of water a 
minute from the 568-foot well 


is being used, among other 
things, to irrigate hay on the 
property 

Although it appears that 
this hig well has an unfair 
advantage over neighboring 
wells, the source said it is the 
ideal method for farming in 
light of developing the penin¬ 
sula as a rural area 
“If you’re to avoid having 
a mass of houses on the pen 
insula, that’s the way to go 
“Groundwater most be left 
for farming.’’ 

There is also another point 


to the story: provincial legis¬ 
lation does not protect a well 
owner’s claim to water. 

The big well may be alarm¬ 
ing residents of Ardmore, but 
there is little residents can do 
about it and it’s definitely 
keeping the area's rural at¬ 
mosphere 

North Saanich Mayor 
George Westwood, who lives 
in Ardmore, has gone on rec¬ 
ord at the regional board as 
supporting the idea that 
groundwater should be left 
for farming. 


Saanich Peninsula Water 
Commission chairman Joe ^ 
Taylor, a dairy farmer In 
Central Saanich, has also 
gone on record supporting 
groundwater for agricultural 


THIS WEEKEND 


Island 
Saw Co. 


UPER 

ANSUI 

TEREO 

ALE 


HOUSE OF STEIN ON YATES 


ATSU 


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cardigans in a variety of 
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Prices Effective Saturday September 2nd Onl\ • While Quantities Last We resen* the right to limit Quantities 


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Food for thought 
on hungry world 


DAILY COLONIST, Victoria, B.C.. Saturday. September 2, 1978 1 3 

* Persecution stories first hand 

Uganda pastor coming 


Mooneyham and orphan saved under fire 


ST. ANDREWS CATHEDRAL (R.C.l 

Blanahard ana Vtow Stront Phon# 3M^5571 

Sunday MaSSBS 8 00 a m . 9 30 a m . 11 00 a m 

1?30 p m and 5 00 p m 
5 00 pm. Saturday 

Confessions: Saturday 11 a m. to Noon. 3 to 4 p m. 

and 7 to 7 30 pm- 



F.G.B.M.F.I. 



BREAKFAST 



Oak Bay Marina Restaurant 
SAT. SEPT. 9th—8:20 A.M. 



$2.50 

Briny a friend ' 



A leading expert on world 
hunger will be in Richmond 
on Sept. 16 with some food for 
thought for Supporters of 
World Vision, the non profit 
relief agency he heads 

Dr. Stan Mooneyham. au¬ 
thor. TV host, evangelist and 
world traveller, has seen 
first-hand the plight of starv¬ 
ing ptople. 

More than that, he's the 
kind of man who does some¬ 
thing about it. His interviews 
with hundreds of Third World 
poor, along with factual docu¬ 
mentation. are contained in 
his book What Do You Say to 
a Hungry World?, one of sev¬ 
eral books he has written or 
co-edited on the plight of 
those less fortunate. 

His frequent travels to 
Third World nations and con¬ 
stant exposure to human suf¬ 
ferings have made Mooney¬ 
ham a champion of the "little 
people" in developing coun¬ 
tries. many of whom struggle 
to survive on less than $200 a 
year. 

“We put evangelism first 
and last in our work, but this 
does not mean that every 
thing we do has a direct 
evangelistic connection. We 
don’t stamp Jesus Saves’ on 
every vitamin pill. We simply 
try to demonstrate Chris' 
love in tangible wifys. 
would be phoney and ma 
lative to provide help to suf¬ 
fering people only because 


they are potential evangelis¬ 
tic statistics." 

Not content merely to write 
and talk of help, he plows into 
trouble head on. A good ex¬ 
ample is the time he char¬ 
tered an old twin-engine Con- 
vair 240 airplane, slipped 
through flak over the be 
sieged Cambodian capital of 
Phnom Penh and airlifted 23 
orhpans to new lives in the 
United States. 

Not content either to allow 
his fellow Americans total in 
dulgence in enjoyment of 
their Thanksgiving Day cele¬ 
brations, he reminds them 
that 12,000 of their fellow 
human beings will die of star¬ 
vation while they’re gorging 


on turkey and dressing. 

Mooneyham believes some¬ 
body has to do something to 
alleviate the chronic hunger 
in the world. That’s why he 
belongs to World Vision 
which now cares for more 
than 155,000 children in about 
50 less-developed countries 

The 1977 budget for World 
Vision International included 
$5.8 million for projects to 
help people in these countries 
become more self-reliant. 

World Vision supporters 
can hear Mooneyham on 
Sept. 16 at 7:30 p.m. in the 
Richmond Inn, 7551 Westmin¬ 
ster Highway on the north 
side between No. 3 Road and 
Gilbert Road in Richmond. 


* simpiy 
irisiian 
I fajri it 
najlipu 



Reformed Episcopal 

CHURCH OF OUR LORD 


Humboldl and Btamhard Si., Victoria, i.C. 
11:00 A.M. 

HOLY COMMUNION 
Dr. Andrew J. Mowatt 
FINDING GOD THROUGH 
SURRENDER" 

Nursery Available 
during (he service 

Owner: IWv. Dr A.J. Mowatt 


383-OT15 




PARISH of ST. ATHANASIUS 

(Anglican Church of North America) 
provides 

CHRISTIAN INSTRUCTION 
FOR CHILDREN 

COMMENCING SEPT. 10 at 1:45 P.M. 
GRACE CHURCH — 1273 Fort Street 

Remember Christ's command 

* Suffer htMe children ... to come unto me “ 

Phone 595-4168 after 5 p m lor further information 

FOR ADULTS: 

SUNG MASS next Sunday, Sept. 3rd at 8 A M. 
Subsaquant Sundaya at 2 P.M. 

Fr. P D. Wilkinson Ft. R. C. Henstock 


THE 



STORY 


The Book of Acts — Re-enacted 

* ANGELIC VISITATIONS * ONE RAISED FROM THE DEAD 

* EIRE VISIBLE AS IN ACTS * UNDERGROUND CHURCHES 

* MIRACLES AND SIGNS * REFUGEE CHURCHES 

* MIRACULOUS RELEASE FROM PRISON 

Hear 

GOD S GOSPEL OF POWER 

as told by the President of 
f Glad Tidirtgs of Uganda 

PASTOR I0SHUA KAMYA 

at 

VICTORIA ORANGE HALL — 1620 Fernwood Road 
Sunday, September 3rd at 7 p.m. 

snontowd by Clad Tiding* Missionary Society of Vancouver 9-2x 


A POWERFUL EXPERIENCE YOU WONT FORGET! 



From drug*, 
crime, prison 
and near suicide 
to one of the 

woHdt fanewnad 
speakers! 

THE PUCE: SACRED HEART CATHOLIC CHURCH 
4040 Neftfcorp* «■ mm,) 

THE DATES STARTING SEPT. ITH 

THE TOC: EVERY EVENING AT 7:30 P JL 

BRING A FRIEND # ALL SEATS FREE 


Bible 

degree 

plan 

lost 

CALGARY (CP) - Rev 
Jim Cantelon of Newmarket. 
Ont , has been unsuccessful 
in a bid to have Canada \ 

Pentecostal Bible colleges 
set up a degree program 
During a question period 
last Saturday at the Pente 
costal Assemblies of Can 
ada's 31st biennial conven 
tion. he asked the church's 
national executive to debate 
the issue at a future meet¬ 
ing. 

“Thi$ is a day when we 
have to give serious consider¬ 
ation to granting degrees.’’ 
Cantelon told the 700 dele¬ 
gates attending the conven¬ 
tion which ended Tuesday. 

But his proposal was not 
presented in the form of a 
resolution and died in a short 
debate, while delegates were 
awaiting election results of 
the national executive. 

Rev. Robert W. Taitinger 
was elected to his sixth term 
as general superintendent of 
the Pentecostal Assemblies 
of Canada 

Taitinger, 51. a native of 
Claresholm, Alta., was first 
elected as general superin 
tendent in 1968. 

Rev. Charles Yates, a for¬ 
mer pastor of Calgary’s Capi¬ 
tal Hill Pentecostal Church, 
was re-elected general secre¬ 
tary for a two-year term. He 
was elected Alberta district 
superintendent in 1968. 

Rev. Carman W. Lynn, a 
native of Battersea, Ont., 
who has been a pastor at 
Ontario and B.C. churches, 
was re-elected executive 
director of overseas mis¬ 
sions. Dr. Robert Argue was 
named executive director of 
ImmM missions, Bible col¬ 
leges and men’s fellowship 
and Rer. S. D. Feltmate was 
re-elected executive director 
of Christian education and 
youth programs. 

There are about 250,000 
members in the church. 

A telephone “offerama” 
sponsored by the conference 
raised $450,000 last weekend. 
The objective was $350,000. 
Alberta led the contribu¬ 
tions with a total of $111,000 
and British Columbia was 
second with $97,000. The Pen¬ 
tecostal Churches in Quebec 
telephoned in a total of $2,- 
800. 

The money raised in the 
offerama will be used in Ca- 
nadian home mission 
projects and in 1$ overseas 
fields where the Pentecostal 
Assemblies have evangelis¬ 
tic and educational facili¬ 
ties. 



ANGLICAN 

RENEWAL 

CENTRE 


Prayer and 
Praite Service 

Every Friday 7:30 p.m. 

in 

SI. Saviour s Church 

CitCMKMIHmiM 


Rudd before and after mending ways 

Catholics rescue 
charismatic rally 

It was going to be ‘Under the Big Top ’ 

Then it nearly wasn’t to be at all. 

But, because of a gracious move on behalf of 
Sacred Heart Roman Catholic churcH. the three-week 
Brian Rudd crusade sponsored by the charistamic 
Church of the Way will be held. It starts Friday at 7:30 
p.m. as scheduled—though under the roof of the 
Sacred Heart Church. 4040 Nelthorpe, off McKenzie, 
and not under a tent at Royal Oak as originally 
planned. 

Rudd comes to Victoria from an appearance as 
main speaker at the Jesus '78 festival held on 300 acres 
of Pennsylvania farmland, before a gathering of 80.000 
of which 15.000 stood up to accept the invitation to 
commit themselves to Christ 

One of the co-ordinators. Billy Bennett, says muni¬ 
cipal bylaws pDtvented the tent setting for the meet 
ings ol wrurld renowned speaker Rudd whose climb 
from the despair of alcohdism. drug addiction and life 
of crime has become a symbol of hope for any who are 
willing to commit their lives to Christ. 

“It's a beautiful thing that Father Guy, the pastor 
of Sacred Heart, and Bishop DeRoo have given (heir 
blessing to Rev. Bill Johns, pastor of Church of the 
Way, for the crusade by opening the doors of the 
church for this important charismatic mission.” 

Rudd, 31. was bom in Saskatoon. His life of crime 
began at age five and drifted downhill from cigarettes 
and alochol to drugs and armed robbery. 

Christ came in the solitary confinement cell 
of a Canadian federal prison. 


Uganda is very much be¬ 
fore the eyes of the world 
these days in the area of re¬ 
pression of human rights, 
especially the repression of 
the freedom of worship. 

Coming to speak in Vic¬ 
toria at 7 p.m. Sundiy at the 
Victoria Orange Hall. 1620 
Fernwood, is a man who has 
experienced first-hand se¬ 
vere persecution for his faith 
in Christ but he has also seen 
the power of God move many 
times in deliverance for tffin- 
self and others. 

Pastor Joshua Kamya Mu- 
soke of Kampala. Uganda, is 
the president of Glad Tidings 
of Uganda. He is the leader of 
more than 400 underground 
churches in Uganda and as 
such has been the prime tar¬ 
get for imprisonment and nu¬ 
merous threats on his life. At 
one point, he was in a prison 
in Kampala from which no 
one is released alive. 

Thrown into a blood-spat¬ 
tered cell with no food, no 
water, and no sanitary facili 
ties, he began to pay and 
praise God in spite of his 
circumstances as the Apostle 
Paul did many times. 

Musoke said God respond¬ 
ed by giving him a deep 
peace and also by speaking 
audibly to him and telling 
him not to fear and that 
everything would be all right. 
The next morning the guard 
came and set him free—an 
unprecedented event for that 
prison. 

The biblical Book of Acts 
has been re-enacted over and 
over with angelic visitations, 
visible fire as in Acts, chap¬ 
ter 2, miracles and signs, one 
raised from the dead, under 
ground churches and miracu¬ 
lous release from prison. Mu 
soke will expand on this and 
more. 

Musoke is the fruit of mis¬ 
sionary work pioneered in 
Uganda by the Glad Tidings 
Missionary. Society of 3156 
Fraser Street, Vancouver. 


Magazine story 
hits censorship 

Censorship in schools in 
hibits the beaming process 
and is undemocratic and un 
Christian, according to an ar 
tide in the current issue of 
the United Church Observer. 

The maga/inc Article Styi 
that banning certain books, 
films and tapes from schools, 
"attacks one of the best ways 
for teachers to bring learning 
to life, and is imcompatiblc 
with the free development of 
the individual student for life 
in an open world.’’ 


r 



Musoke 

Missionaries with Kenyan 
interpreters first went to 
Uganda in 1956 and God start¬ 
ed a revival from the very 
first street meeting they held 
in Kampala. The Ugandans 
challenged them on the .real¬ 
ity of their God and brought a 
deaf and dumb woman to 
them for healing. She was 
instantly healed and began to 
speak and hear perfectly. 

What followed was a reviv- 


Anglican 


Record for Holy Writ 


After this weekend, no one 
will be able to say Victoria 
hasn't a prayer. 

It will have the longest 

prayer in the world. At least 
brieflv. 

Emmanuel Baptist Church 
plans to establish an original 
world record for inclusion in 
the 1979 Guinness Book of 
World Records. 

The aim is to inscribe the 
Lord’s Prayer in 20-foot let¬ 
ters across more than half a 
mile of sand at Willows 

Beach. 

The purpose, say church 
members, is to bring the good 
news of Christ to people by 
using innovative methods. 

In promotional hand bills, 
the church describes the 
event this way: 

WHEN? Sundav. Sept. 3. 7 
a.m. to 1 p.m. (Working for 
the Lord on Labor Day.) 

WHERE? Oak Bay’s Wil¬ 
lows Beach (the whole beach! 
Forecast: sunshine.) 

HOW? By inscribing in the 
sand with 20-foot letters the 
Lord’s Prayer all along the 
2,900-foot beach. . 

Event co-ordinator Wayne 
Wickett says he hopes Sun¬ 
day's happening will inspire 
other churches with larger 
beaches nearby to try to 
outdo the record by making 
the holy writ even larger. 

• 

The Greater Victoria Coun¬ 
cil of Churches will hold its 
first fellowship lunch of the 
season at noon, Thursday, 
Sept. 14, at Grace Lutheran 
Church, 1273 Fort. 

Speaker will be Rev. Remi 
de Roo, Roman Catholic 
. Bishop of Victoria. His topic 


CHURCH 

CHRONICLES 

is Concerns of the Canadian 
Conference on Social Devel¬ 
opment 

Tea and coffee will be pro¬ 
vided but bring your own 
lunch. 

• 

Dr. Hugh McLeod cele¬ 
brates the 40th anniversary 
of his arrival at First United 
Church (Quadra at Bal 


of Dr. and Mrs. McLeod will 
have the chance to speak with 
them. 

• 

Rev. Andrew Mowatt will 
resume a 7 p.m. vesper ser¬ 
vice at the Church of Our 
Lord, Humboldt and Blan- 
shard. on Sundays starting 
Sept. 10. 

The service will include a 
favorite hymn sing and bible 
study. Part of the Reformed 
Episcopal Church of Canada, 
the Church of Our Lord was 


moral) on Sunday, Sept. 10, - founded in 1874 
when the title of Minister 
Emeritus will be conferred 
upon him at the morning ser¬ 
vice. 

A reception will follow the 
service so that many friends 


Mowatt, who has been re¬ 
covering from a heart attack 
suffered last year, said he 
was looking forward to the 
hours of evening fellowship 
and study. 


CITY AND DISTRICT CHURCHES 


OOSPtL CHAPELS 


OAKLAND* CH APC l 
Fernwood and Cedar Hill Oort 
SUNOAY 

IDl m Breakingof 6 read 
II. IS am.Sun 


So taker Mr LI 
4 30pm EvtrongSarvtca 
So aakar Dr A Funk 
Thurv, 100 1 m 
Provor 1 Ditto Study 


VICTORIA GOSPEL CHAPEL 

IMP* ‘ * 


Pandora Ay 
SUNDAY 


♦ JOam.LortfaSuoor 
11: IS am. 

Sunday School and 
Family libit Naur 
Toan. Ivanino Sarvtce 
SOMfctr tl Dolb Stfv.tr. 
Mr Harold Summon. Jr 

MeDNESOAY 7 4SPA4 
u.tttontry Pravtr Mooting 
Mr R Mitchell. Nigeria 


SPIRITUALISM 


VICTORIA CHRISTIAN 
SPIRITUALIST CHURCH 
ate Pert strott 
Sunday*. H am 
MtorNUp and Soc.ti FtHowWip 
Ciah-vovanca at (very Servlet 



t>w*4 

D-l-A-L A 
PRAYER 

Phono 

595-3635 

91 Hours 


Oak Bay Unftad Church 


OPEN DOOR SPIRITUALIST CHURCH 
HMCook Strttf 
Sul 7p.m. Rev. 6. Corrtgen 
Wed. 710 pm* 

Mr. J.H 


IOCIITY OP PR4BMDD 


SOCIETY OF FRIENDS 
(Ouehen) 

meeting for worship 

SUNDAY II AM. 
VISITORS welcom* 
131 FERN ST 


UNITARIAN 


UNITARIAN CHURCH 
lOaSuotrlor Strtot 
No Sunday larvic* 

V I U C. Summer Comp 


LUTN1RAN 


LUTHERAN CHURCH OF 
THE CROSS 

Cedar Hill and Cedar HH1 Crow *on<h 
AltrtdJ. C Johntoa Ptslor. 477-JSSl 
10 01 am 

Olvlnt WonMp Strvict 
Tht Church fflwrt FamMlm 


E vtngti.ctl Luthortn Church ot Canada 
liLCC former I v A L C ) 


HOPE LUTHERAN CHURCH 
MISSOURI SYNOO 
It24 Ctrrlck Strtot oft Foul Dav 
Tht Rev L M. Ctrtton,PM* OT ?» 
Sunday School f * am. 

10 00 am Oiy.nt Worth* Strvict 
A Church oTTht LuRttran Haur 
tnd "Thl« It Pw IHt” 


GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH 
W7J Pori Strati M3 42So 
MMtitttr: Rev Ronald C Notion 
Lutheran Church In Amanca 
(Acrou from Central Junior High) 
llarn Wonhip 

12 IS pm FtnowtftW Luncheon 


GOOO SHEPHERD LUTHERAN 
CHURCH 

MIS Cedar hin Rood 
Rev Fred KnabaL Pattor 


K> im- 

li am.-rOarman Service 
ii am. - luadtr Schact 

REDEEMER LUTHERAN CHURCH 


Comar jackim and JankJm 

lOe.m. Wonhip 


SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST 


SEVENTH DAY AOVENTIST CHURCH 
«R3 Pandora Avt of Vancouver st 
Sebbtfh School—f M am. Saturday 
wonMpServica-n ooa.nr. 

Wtdnttdev-7 JOp m 
Pattor Lvtw Satrt (721 279) 


chcistchucch 

caxhedcal 

Quadra at Courtney 
2 blocks up from Douglas 
8 00 a m. Holy Eucharist 
9:30 a.m. Family Eucharist 
11 :00 a m. Sung Eucharist 
5 15 p.m Holy Eucharist 
7 30 p m. Evensong 

WEEKDAYS 
Martins 9 OO a m 
Evensong 5 15 p.m 
Holy Eucharist 
Tuee and Wed ft am. 
Thura 7 30 a m 
Fri. 12:15 noon 


St. John’s 

1611 Quadra Dear Pandora 
8 a.m., 9:30 a.m. «c 11 a.m. 
Preacher: 

Rev. Christopher Lonsdale 
Than.. IE:3E a.m. 


The art. R. Mar Rat. m nai 


ST. BARNABAS 

Belmont and Begbie 
l ie am. Wallin* and I «min«nl<>. 
MOD am. subk Ha** 

7:3t pm K*en*nag \ 
HOLY COMMUNION DAILY 
Tht Re*. I). a. L ka**ti* 


St. Christopher's 

( arev Road At Ttllkum 

Family sen Ice 9:M am. 
Sunday School |:3D a.m. 
Rector: Rev. P. W . hie* 


ST. DUNSTAN’S 

Ty ndall and San Jaan 
The Rev. Brian Page 
s ee am. Holy C ommuntoa 
t: IS am. Family F urharlst 


ST. GEORGE TNI NARTYR 

Codboro Bay Rood and 
Maynard Street 
Rev. Barry Jonks. 477-0705 

8:00 a.m. Holy Communion 
• 30 a.m. 

Pariah Family Euchartat 
11.00 a.m. 

Choral Euchariet 


&t. IGukr’s 

Cor. (odar EUI eat Csdar Wit X Ed 

kfdif 

Iht Rtv l» M*ard F. Mm Mr. 

U> Reader Nr. A E. Sants 
**• am. Holy Communion 
IIJE am. Choral KucharUt 
73D pm. tvemtong 


SIMM'S 

The Pariah < herrh at Oak Bay 

Tht Van. Hyuet J Jmti 
L. TV. Eerier 
am am. IMy Commaaiao 
•:» am. F asally Furharhu 
n et am. CRatal ( anasates 
1M pm. F.*rn*aaa 


s>t. ftrtrrs 

Wuadra al RL Peter* Ed. 
WMIII 

RF\. (HAILE* A. HAMF.R 

t:at am. Bely ( ommanton 
10:11 am. Italy Ceamaaloo 


Attend the Church 
of your choice 


St. Philip’s 


Rer let—Rev. D. Nell I 
(salt am. Maly Ceamaalea 
•til am. Family BacharIM 
IIam. fheral teaimaatea 


al lhat spread across (he 
country to the extent that in 
1974. when all foreigners 
were forced to leave the coun¬ 
try, there were 200 afctive 
churches and pastors. 

Musoke then took over the 
leadership of Glad Tidings of 
Uganda and since 1971. under 
heavy persecution, the work 
grew to more than 400. active 
churches today. 

Musoke recently appeared 
with pastor Maureen Gaglar 
di on CJOR’s Sunday Line 
program and within the 
month has scheduled appear¬ 
ances on 100 Huntley Street 
and the 700 club. 

For further information 
about Sunday’s meeting, call 
382-6325. 


ST. MATTHIAS’ 

Richmond at Rtehordson 

Crrm W. E. GrccRhalgh L. T\ 
AkvlMant. 

lav. G. H. Roger*, BXW„ MIXv. 
I N am. Holy (ommaaloo 
ID:3D am. Choral Eaeharlit, 

Nur*rrv 


ST. DAVID BY-THE-SEA 

61B4 Cordova Bay Rd. 

r. A*4m» E. Giln 


United 


FIRST UNITED 
CHURCH 

Quadra at Balmoral 

Rev. Hugh >1. Hunter 
Rev. Georgr Strulhers 
Mr. Lawrence E. Moon 

10 A.M 

MORNING WORSHIP 

“WORK, THE 
CREATIVE ADVENTURE*’ 

Rev. Hugh Hunter 

Baby Creche and Toddler 
Facilities available 

M«*le IMre, lor: Oeorge s, hrrm 
Oraoaist: ( urnnr- Dm \mI Brewin 


METROPOLITAN 

UNITED CHURCH 
Pandora at Quadra Street 

» Minister* 

*•« A E. King B A O D 
Rov I Laura Bullof BA STM 
Rav A. CaWar. B A. 

11:00 A.M. 

"A MIGHTY WORK 
FOR GOD" 

Tho Raw E. Laura But tv 

Cracha and Pra-achooi 
Caro available 


CENTENNIAL 

UNITED CHURCH 
Gorge Road and David Street 
(Opp. Colony Motor Inn) 

Rev. G. A. McMechan 
11:06 A.M< * 

"LIFE TAKES ON 
A NEW MEANING" 
Bah> Creche and Nur*er\ 

Hr. Fror*l William* 4>rgaai>t 


ST. AIDAN’S 

UNITED CHURCH 

Rh hntoae al ledar Htll \ K<ud 
ViiaiMer*: Ret. J Rae Allaa 
Re*. Clare Halmr, 
Organist: Hr*. Hr mine 


10-00 A.M. 

Mimm.t Setti.,' lime 

MORNING WORSHIP 

Re*. ( larr A. Hulmrs 


( RF'.t Hi: PKOUIH It 


OAK BAY 
UHITED CHURCH 

.Granite and Mitchell 

11 a.m. 
WORSHIP 
“WORKING 
WAGES’ 

In. DM Van Drwtan 

Nurtary and Kindargartan 

OIALA-PRAYER 595-3635 


7033 Belmont m Pemb'ofc*' SOS 4706 



_cut . 

UNITED CHURCH ^>VC ] 



CADBORO BAY UNITED 

2625 ARBI Tl S ROAD 

Re* JotM H. Ua*M*oa. 177 71 Ik 

SUMMER SERVICES 
10:00 A.M. 
Nursery Care 
Friendly nekome lo visitor* 
and tourists — Coftee Hour. 


FAIRFIELD 
UNITED CHURCH 

(rener Moss at Fairfield) 
MiaUler: Rev H W Krr1e> pk.O. 
Organ! *e Robert Cooper. I l l M 
( hart It Sen Ire* II am. 

Re* H W her lev 
Snr*er* far Children 


GORDON HEAD 
UNITED CHURCH 

Rav RuLmhi k v*che»* 

arr-tMcT^Tr-atiO* 

11:T5 A.M. 

"ARE WE BEING 
CHEATED?" 

For Labor ftuadav 
Kindergarten In the 
Church Hall 
MeeUag al ftL Dan*4aa’« 
Cbarrb. earner of Tyndall 
and san Jaan 


MtM.V COMMl MON 

l*L 3rd and life Sunday 


JAMES MY UNITED CHURCH 

611 Michigan Dtroof 
A Meadtr rbnrrb un lag 


r luot 

16:44 am. 
Morning Womhlp — lt:tt am. 

Minister: Re*. Bert Fnrsytbe 
than smsmi 








^ «v -•• • 



























































































































































I 




Horses , pilots walk away 
from backstretch pileup 


DAILY CULONIST, Victoria, B.C., Saturday, September 2, 1978 IS 

*** 


BY JIM TANG 

Standardbreds are said to 
be considerably tougher than 
the thoroughbreds, and the 
1.092 fans at Sandown Friday 
night will buy that after wit¬ 
nessing a spectacular back- 
stretch crash in the fifth 
race. 

It happened just after the 
field had straightened out for 
the backstretch run, and 
from the stands it appeared 
that Ocala Dutch, being pil~ 
nted by Bob Wallace, broke 
stride and was run over by 
Wee General Fuzz, which had 
DuWavne Guest in the sulky. 

Both horses went down 
with the drivers being thrown 
out of their seats, and it didn't 
seem possible that there 
wouldn't be at least one seri 
nus injury although the crash 
involved the trailers. But 
Guest and Wallace, it was 
reported, received nothing 
worse than a shaking up and 
both horses left the track 
under their own power. They 
may miss the final five days 
of the Sandown meeting but 
the word was that they will 
race again. 

The race was won by Dun- 
hoe. the 10-year-old gelding 
apparently lilting the wet 
racing surface and staying on 
(he front end to beat T.V. 
Pilot across the finish line. 

The sloppy surface also 
suited Hays Golden Patch, 
which had shown little since 
some early Sandown success, 
and the lightly-race Maple 
Hills Todd, starting for only 
the third time at Sandown. 

An eight-year-old gelding 
owned by Roger Provencher 
of Surrey, Rays Golden Patch 
started its Sandown cam¬ 
paign with a win and had two 
place and two show finishes 
in the next four starts. But in 
the last four starts there was 
nothing close to success, and 
the 9-1 Friday odds were 
earned. But Rays-Golden 
.Patch left the rest far behind 


Sport 

today 

GOLF 

1:30 a.m. — Start of 
opening round of Metro 
ToyoU-CFAX Open, final 
foursome off at 1:IS p.m.. 
(edar Hill Golf C lub. 

HARNESS RACING 

1:25 p.m. — Parade to 
post, Sandown Park. 

CRICKET 

1:30 p.m. — District As¬ 
sociation. knockout Cup 
semi-finals: Incogs vs. 
Oak Bay, St. Michael's 
University School: Cast¬ 
aways vs. Albion, Beacon 
Hill Pajk. 

Al TO RACING 

7 p.m. — Time trials for 
stock car and mechanics 
races. Western Speed¬ 
way. 


in the stretch to set up the 
biggest Exactor of the night. 

It paid $330.80, and helping 
making it juicy was a dis¬ 
qualification. Judges looked 
at the film after an objection 
had been made, ruled that 
favored Taiga had caused in¬ 
terference at the three-quar 
ter pole and moved Marcel 
Bouvier’s gelding from set 
ond to third, giving place 
money and a place in the 
Exactor to the 17-1 Cals Do¬ 
minion. 

Maple Hills Todd, last and 
third in previous appear 
antes, held on in the stretch 
to beat out Mel J. Victor, a 
recent arrival from Calgary . 
And Hazels Yankee, coming 
from behind to score an 
eighth Sandown win. looked 
impressive beating Nechako 
Prince to the wire by about a 
neck in the featured seventh 
race. 

FIRSTACE — SAM. lmilepgc*ltr*l 

— Trotters Non winners tins ro**» 
Also tttptMt: Poem — Clgimtng — 
Claiming Price Sl.SM plus allowances 
(Non winners ttus meet wiM at loast 
eight starts at ttns moot.) 

Ruby Khan (Astg) UN 6.20 2 90 
Senga Silas (Dryctent 5.10 3.40 

Brontosaurus (Urouhaii) 2 70 

Tima 2:14 3/S. Exactor (I L 7) 
S41 80 

Clover Many. Stone Flower, Steady 
Ace Wallace Crooks, Noble Express 

also ran. 

SECOND RACE - UU, I (Pita pace 

— Claiming — Claiming Price SI.SM 
plus allowances (Non winners $454 
last six starts who are winners aver 
S2M last six starts. Also eligible Trot 

Caotain Ucody N (Evs) 4.90 3 70 3 70 
Spunkev Dale (Jooust) 510 4.20 
Tiddler Mac (Urouhert) 4.20 

T ime 2: IS. Exactor (3 A 2) 512.20. 
Sand Bandit, johnny Ponce Clev 
brook Barry, Valiev Jim. Ivans Lucky 
Girl also ran. 

THIRD RACE — MM. 1 mtte pace - 
Claiming — Claiming Price HSU plus 
allowances. (Winners el $454 er ever 
last six starts.) 

Dons Florico <S Ercn) 14.50 3.10 4.10 
Mr. Ming (Linton) 3.20 3.00 

Chermin Dusty (Hudcml 3.70 

Tima 2: IS. Exactor (4 & 1) 545 90 
Stop Watch. Sir Bob. Waynes Buddy, 
Halcyon Harmony. Mark Dominion 
also an. 

Al‘s Dominion scratched 

FOURTH RACE -1490, 1 m»o pact 
_ Claiming Handicap — Claiming 
Prices 51.754 to SMN atm altow 
ances 

RaysGoidenPetch (Tn) 21.M 170 4 80 
Col’s Dominion (Rankin) 15.30 9.40 
Taiga (Bouvier) 3.30 

Time 2 14 2 5. Exactor A9 & I) 
5330 80 

Sanaa Noia. Wiilia T Kmgtn. Glen 
Crooks. Meadow Bay. Miss Raian also 
ran 

FIFTH RACE -STM. limit pace - 
Claiming — Claiming Price SUM plus 


EIGHTH RACE - STM. 1 mile pace 


MapleHillsTodd (Mch) 13.70 7.50 * 30 
Mel J. Victor (G.Hgswth) 5.20 4 00 
Shady Hill Sam (Armstrong) 4.10 
Time 2:12. Exactor (3-4) 577.30. 
Adios Tee Maral. Lord O Lynch. 
Karrob Gift. Sodate, Got To Be also 
ran 

Attendance 1097 Mutual handle 571. 
779 

Entries 

Post Time: 130 p.m. 

FIRST—S4M.claimina.onei 


Sallys Sister 
Spiders Pride 
Sharkv The Great 
Moko N * 

No Dill 
Lovtrue 
Rythm C 
Billy Adtos 

SECOND -S4M. i 
Nechako Teen* 
Hoindge Dixie 
Senga Hanna 
Shadows N How 
Annies Rebel 
Arts Choice 
Laskah Gold 
Call N Raisa 


Bethel Champ 
Mar Con Honey 
Irish Lehigh 
Matson N 
Adios Lorono 
Timber Bill 
Tiger Paw Khan 
Holrido* Dakota 
FOURTH-S4M 
pace. 

Stop Watch 
Svvilla 
Bold Lobo 
Maple Hills Mtss 
Lenmos Choice 
Bav Mark 
Pine Soook 
Senga Kav 

FIFTH - SM8. a 

Rockford Ann 
Khan Hit 
Expresso Coffee 
B C Classy 
Shadows Rival 
Gils Counsel 
Yankee Mate 

SIXTH - IM0. 
pace. 

Mss Hazel 
Perdner Jove 


L McOote 
D. Jungouist 
G Tonkin 
T. Burke 
D Bell 
M Milliteire 
C Gagnon 


• mile pace. 

w. Urouhert 
M. Evans 
D Jungouist 
D Ferguson 
B Wallace 
J. Mohorich 
J Rankin 
J. Hudon 


L. Clark 
D. Ferguson 
G Tonkin 
R. Graham 
j Rankie 
M. Armstrong 
D Guest 
J. Rankin 


Come Back Due 
Dustys Bomber 
Bankers Chip 
Klinker Jim 

SEVENTH -SU 

pace. 

T iger Adios 
Bald Scott 
Roger Tec 
Hotline Annie 
Four Score 
Jeoov Ho 
Dominion Duke 
Shady Hill Sam 
Also eligible 
Avalon Doit 
Linde Quill 
EIGHTH - 1150. 

Magic Dabber 
Dobbte Joe 
Irish Beth McCal 
Prairie Bandit 
Baron Romero 
Mikes Dominion 
Callaghan 
B C Arden 


D Junoouist 
K Linton 

R. Gommill 

B Bovd 

i, claiming* one mile 

G. M'worth 
j Rankin 
R Gemmitt 
j Mohorich 
C Sibtge 
M Evans 

S. Ericsson 
C Gagnon 

L. PH 
G Tonkin 


E Arsenault 
K Linton 
L Clark 
C Gagnon 
M Bouvier 
J. Rankin 

M Evans 


NINTH —S1.4M. Invitational Handt 
cap. one mde pace 

H T Brook 

Steady Nick J Mohorich 

Dark Phantom M. Evans 

Dusty Tex D. Jungouist 

Deacon Brodie W. Urouhert 

Sandy Pick M. McCallum 

Trevor John J Rankm 

Combat Lands G. H worth 

TENTH - MM, ane mile pace. 


Hoindge Bob 
Andys Adam 
Melody Wave 
Maple Hills Shelby 
Bav Comet 
Hal R Flying 
Mark Doc 


Also eligible 
Ringing Time 
Holrido* Duchess 


D Jungouist 
G. Tonkin 
T Burke 
C. Gagnon 

F Hodson 
D Bell 
M McCallum 


D Junoouist 
J. Hudon 
L. Pitre 
O. Guest 
,C. Sibioa 
T Burke 
J. Rankin 


k MacDonald 
J Hudon 
C Gagnon 
0 Ferguson 
W urouhert 
K. Linton 
P lundv 


M Bouvier 
K. MacDonald 

X 



STOR 
WINDOWS 

liprivu iNSslitio* mi stvM ytn 
mnv aid helps It kMp 


Call Doii| Bowtor. 652-3901 
or Bus 652-2761 

NO OBLIGATION 

Mein Building Products 


Dunhoe (Arms!) 7M 4 41 3 10 

T. V. Pilot (Burke) 3 30 3.00 

Marc Kimberly (MeDole) 4.00 

Time 2:12 1/S. Exactor (2 4 1) 
531.70. 

Andys Buzzer. Nechako Chris. Paul 
Bruiser also ran. 

Wee General Fuzz and Ocala Dutch 
did not finish. 

SIXTH RACE - STM, 1 mUe poet — 
Claiming Handicap - Claiming Prices 
52,M01* 53,040 plus allowances 

Andys Lester (Me Dole) 7.50 7 90 3.40 
Andys Wayne (Hudon) 3.10 2.40 
Right Proud (J. Gagnon) 4 SO 

Time 2:13 Exactor (14 4) 521 00 

Senga Scarlett, Bitty Brooke also 
ran. 

Monterey Brook, B. C. Flyer, Dustvs 
Norman scratched 

SEVENTH RACE - 51, MA 1 mNe 


Hazels Yankee (Boyd) 7.40 3 70 7 90 
Nechako Prince (Mrch) 5.00 2 90 
Dusty Speedbail (Linton) 2 SO 

Tim* 2:11 2/5. Exactor (1 4 51 
S48 40 

Exei B Mac, Paean Bill. Senga Lav. 
noc also ran. 

Little Pence scratched 



Wendy gains 
finals 

TORONTO (CP) - Un- 
seeded Wendy Barlow of Vic- 
loria advanced to the 
women's singles final of the 
Canadian junior internation¬ 
al tennis tournament Friday 
with a 9*3. 6*2 win over Lucia 
Fernandez of the United 
States. 

! In the other women's semi- 
: final, second seeded Ava 
; Pfaff of West Germany beat 
; No. 3 seed Mary Lou Piatek 
> of the U.S. 6-2. 6-3. 

; Fernandez and Piatek de 
; felted Cathy Drury and 
Joanna Drurie of Britain 2-6, 
6-3. 6-3 in women's doubles 
: semi-finals and Caryn Cope¬ 
land and Sue Rasmussen of 
the U.S. beat Christianne Jo- 
llssaint and Isabelle Villiger 
of Sw itzerland 6-3, 34, 7-5. 

Lnseeded Marco Ostoya of 
Yugoslavia upset sixth-seed¬ 
ed Blaine Willenborg of the 

* U.S. 1-6. 7-6, 6-3 in men s sin¬ 
gles semi-finals, while No. 1 
seed Per Hjertquist of Swe- 

• den ousted No. 3 Steffan Si- 
monsson of Sweden 6-6. 5-7. 

? 6 - 1 . 


END OF SUMMER SALE 






CLOTHING 

DOWN JACKETS and VESTS OCO/ 
OPTO . OD /O OFT 


UOIS KNICKERS 
R«fl. to $24.96. NOW 


* 10 " 

WOOL and CORD OflO/ 

KNICKERS.. 4U /0 m 

*27" [ 
’5“ 
‘19“ 
’ 22 “ 


ET SEA ANORAKS 
Rpg. $34.99. NOW 

DENIM ANORAKS 
Rgg. $27 99. NOW 

WOOL BLEND 
JAC SHIRTS. 


PURE WOOL SHIRTS 
Rgg. $30.00 . 


WOOL BLEND SHIRTS 
Vtog. $20.00 . 


ALL JBS COTTON !. 

SWEATERS UR TO 50% OFF 
UVIc THERMOFLOATS 
JACKETS. Lot S119.00 
NOW. 


*15“ 

*2“m 


79“ 


ALL KNIVES 
ANO COMPASSES 

CLIMBING ROPES 
ANO HARDWARE 

CLIMBING BOOTS 
MEINOL full etppi shank 
Rgg 5110.00 NOW 


VASOUE ASCENDER H 
Reg $64 OO. NOW.. 


20% i 
10% i 

*60°° 

W 


mil ABC Recreational 

SEPT. 



Equipment 


9-2x 


564 YATES ST. 384-6522 

VISIT OUR NEW STORE AT OUR OLD LOCATION 

Dovun-f—d g—r, buchppcfce, XC fMng. gnowmhopg. quality tgntg A boot* 


Open 
till 
9 p.m. 
Fri, 


ROBUST • SAUCY • RELIABLE • LONG-LASTING 

HUSKY 32 m 38 

@Hu6qvama 


r pruning. For 
. For clGaring. 


a 


iky 3! 

manat, who want to usg a chain aaw often. For i 
cutting firewood. For building For telling treee. f 
The saw for you is tha new Huaky 32. The robuat saucy, 
reliable and long-lattlng hobby aaw. 

HUSKY 32 *189 98 14” BLADE 

HUSKY 38 *249 50 14* BLADE 

ALP BECKER’S CHAIN 8AW8 



Price includes woodcutters kit with files, 
file sharpening gauges, filing v 
grease gun, bar cover, funnel, 
screwdriver, spark plug and bar wrench. 

2981 TILLICUM 384-6414 


FOR AS LITTLE 
AS 35 s8 OUR 
14 POINTTUNE UP 
IS MUSIC 
TO YOUR EARS. 



14 Point T une- up 


4 CYLINDER 


6 CYLINDER 


8 CYLINDER 


1C88 0088 AQ88 


Prices quoted are tor parts and labour. Resistor pjugs extra Air conditioned cars extra. 

, Here’s what we do: 

1 Initial ignition system 

analysis 

2 Test & clean battery, cables 
and hold down. 

' 3 Supply & install new spark 
plugs. 

4 Supply & install new points 


and condenser. 


5 Pertorrn cylinder balance 
test. 

6 Check rotor 

7 Che kH T wiring, distrib¬ 
utor cap. coil, primary circuit. 

8 Check and adiust timing. 

9 Check P C. V. operation 


'10 Check and lubricate heat 
riser valve. 

11 Check & adjust idle mixture. 

12 Check tuel pump and filter 
tor proper operation. 

13 Check air cleaner element. 

14 Final ignition system 
analysis. 


IS YOUR CAR'S TIMING CHEATING YOU Of MILEAGE? 

A TANK FULL OF ESSO EXTRA PREMIUM UNLEADED WITH THIS TUNE-UPS TIMING CHECK AND RESET WILL TELL YOU. 

(GAS EXTRA). 

Atlas Shock Absorber Special 


STANDARD 


HEAVY DUTY 



56 Pt. Car Care Inspection 


Our mechanics will check the 
areas in your car vital to trouble- 
tree driving and give you a 
writteo report plus an estimate 
tor any necessary repairs. 




Our Car Care Inspection is by 
appointment only. Phone today 
and be sure to ask your 
Checkpoint Service Dealer tor 
details. 


r> A 0ur dealers guarantee their work for 90 days or 4.000 miles You pay no more than prices quoted, on 
[cSSOj most cars, tor Checkpoint Service offers at partiopatmgDealers. Put your purchase on your Esso Credit 
Card Or. at most Esso stations, you can use your Visa ur Master Charge Card 

AVAILABLE ONLY WHERE YOU SEE THIS SIGN 


Checkpoint 
Service 

Making service specials 
work for you. 

OFFERS EXPIRE SEPTEMBER 




Atlas Motors Ltd. 

324 Ceok St.. Victoria 
383-6514 

Brentwood Auto Ltd. 

6738 WNI buM M.. 
Bruton* lay 662-3021 

Burnside Esso Sorelce 

300 W. 6mtl4* M . Vtclem 
302433) 

Bumsida Sarvica Garage 

2 W. Bomsido RU . Victoria 
383-5031 


Causeway Service Ltd. 

308 Routa ft. Victim 
363-3612 

Cedar Hill Esso Sonic* 

3927 BMriMty M.. Vlctorii 
477 1617 

Danny's Cotwood Auto. Ltd. 

2146 SmKi Roy.. Cotwood 
476-2431 

Dnncsn Esso 8onlco 

5332 Tms Cinidi Hw|., Dmcm 
748-4511 


Glinford Esso Service 

4233 Stanford kn Victoria 
479-6414 

Imperii! Cintra 

1700 Hillside Aw.. Victoria 
592-2455 

Lake Sanrica Garage 

Like Cowichan 

740-3151 

Mayfair Esso Sarvica 

3201 OoMtat ».. Vlctorii 
333-5614 

• 


McKenzie Esso SeH-Sam 
4001 Qaadrtft. Vlctorii 
479-4715 

University Hts. Esso 

3064 SMkwriN St , Victim 



<jf r 






^ J 


X . 





































































































j WHAT’S BARRY BOWMAN 
I «•» DOING UP AT 5? LISTEN. 


t 




laii® Zionist 


Section Two 


Saturday, September 2, 1978 


Page 17 



IT1EIRO * 

*> 

fr. 

ESSO CAR CLINIC 
l TESTED USED CARS 


J / 


Courtenay 

Group 
a step 
toward 
society 

By RUTH MckELLAR 


COURTENAY — Eight 
people have been elected to 
verve as a constitutional 
committee to oversee forma¬ 
tion of a society to operate a 
75-bed personal and interme 
diate-care facility adjacent 
to Glacier View Home 
The committee was chosen 
from delegates who repre¬ 
sented several senior citizen 
groups. Women’s Institute. 
Red Cross. Royal Canadian 
Legion and several service 
clubs. They attended a rieet 
ing here this week. 

The steering committee, 
however, is composed pri ¬ 
marily of senior citizens. 

Roly Woolsey. president of 
the North Island Council of 
the Old Age Pensioners, 
raised the question of owner 
ship of the existing Glacier 
View Home and declared it 
belonged to the Old Age Pen 
sioners. 

Despite several explana 
tlons. he continued to main¬ 
tain his position and said he 
wasn't going to see senior 
citizens “lose their shirt.” 

Woolsey also demanded to 
see the bill of sale which 
deeded the property to the 
city of Courtenay, which later 
turned It over to the regional 
district for operation. 

The meeting was called by 
the Senior Citizens’ Resource 
Committee, a lay group ap¬ 
pointed from the regional dis- 
irict to look Into construction 
or an intermediate-care facil¬ 
ity to replace the existing 
(Racier View Home, which 
has become outdated 
Elected to the steering 
committee were Trevor 
Davies. Gerry Garoz. John 
Franklin. Geoff Bullock. Roly 
Woolsev Eileen Turnbull- 
Nancy Franklin. Tom Men- 
zies, with a ninth member to 
be apppointed. 

When the steering commit 
tee has its constitution adopt 
ed. a society will be formed 
and incorporated to oversee 
construction and operation of 
the new facility. 


Faculty 

addition 

highly 

mobile 



Bay plant still in running 


DUNCAN—Western Energy Corporation 
is still planning to go abend with its pro¬ 
posed bog fuel pellet plant at Cowkhan 

EyT 

In a letter to North Cowkhan council. 
George Legg, Western Energy 's vke-presi 
dent, stated that the company plans to go 
abend and Is "awaiting government approv¬ 
al la order to proceed." 

North Cowkhaa wrote to the company to 


NANAIMO—Mike Mac 
Coll, a new member of the 
faculty at Malaspina College, 
will be travelling to Duncan 
and Lake Cowichan on a 
weekly basis in the coming 
months to teach two courses 
in the college’s business and 
public administration pro¬ 
gram. 

MacColl. who recently 
completed the public admin¬ 
istration program at the Uni¬ 
versity of Victoria, has ex¬ 
perience In private industry 
as well as with both the pro¬ 
vincial and the federal gov¬ 
ernments. 

He will be teaching super 
visory management in Lake 
Cowichan on Monday eve¬ 
nings. 7-10 p.m., starting on 
Sept. 11. and personnel ad 
ministration in Duncan on 
Wednesday evening. 7-10 
p.m., starting on Sept. 13. 

Both courses are designed 
to provide people working in 
industry and government 
with an Insight into the role of 
the supervisor and the per¬ 
sonnel function. 

They will be of special in¬ 
terest to people already in 
supervisory positions or 
planning to enter the man¬ 
agement field and carry 
credit toward completion of 
the college's associate in 
commerce diploma. 

Further information can be 
obtained from the college s 
Duncan office, at 254 Evans 
Street, or from the continuing 
education office at Lake 
Cowichan senior high school. 


Lighthouse of the August noon 


Gabriola Island is undoubtedly one of most beauti¬ 
ful parts of West Coast s world-famous Gulf Islands 
chain, and this part of Drumbeg provincial park 


clearly shows why. It was comparatively clear and 
calm day. providing fabulous noon time view of 
shoreline and lighthouse on the island 


But E&N figures bright 

It’s refrain or else 


By DON COLLINS 


The E&N Steering Com¬ 
mittee was flushing out 
some Interesting figures 
Friday — some good and 
others a little on the deli 
cate side 

Committee chairman 
John Cooper of Victoria 
felt even CP Rail might 
change its mind about the 
economic future of the lit 
tie passenger service 
after learning that re¬ 
vived interest in the E&N 
had provided it with 8.400 
passengers last month — 
some 900 more than had 
boarded the train during 
all of 1976. 

While he had a battery of 
other optimistic figures, Coo¬ 
per said the E&N is sud¬ 
denly faced with a shortage 
of toilets. 

The regular 70-seat car has 
one toilet, still functional, he 
said, but one of the two on the 
100-seat addition broke down 
last week. 

“It's incredible, but we now 
find that CP Rail, even 
though it has dozens and 
dozens of these cars, has only 
one spare toilet left," said 
Cooper. 

The spare is apparently on 
Us way from Montreal, but he 
wasn’t sure whens it might be 
expected — or what would 
happen now if another toilet 
dies and there are no spares 
left. 

To Cooper and other rail¬ 
way buffs, the situation 
brings back the old haunting 
refrain: "Passengers will 
please refrain from (lushing 
toilets when the train is 
standing in the station." 

With today's shortage, 
however, they say it’s simply 
a matter of refraining “till 
the other blffy gets here." 

The figures projected by 
the committee would indicate 
that more than one toilet (and 
train) would be in order. Coo¬ 
per feels the passenger ser¬ 
vice will have carried 40, 
000 by year’s end, since 


loadings to date have already 
topped 26,000. 

“It’s ironic that only eight 
months ago this same service 
was ordered abandoned by 
the Canadian Transport 
Commission on the grounds 
that it was uneconomic and 
likely to remain so," Cooper 
said. 

The CTC ruled in favor of a 


CP Rail application to drop 
the historic passenger ser¬ 
vice that serves Vancouver 
Island from Victoria to Cour¬ 
tenay, but has put off the date 
of execution to Dec. 13 to 
ailpw the province to chal¬ 
lenge the ruling in the 
courts. 

The committee was formed 
by L&N employees, mem 


bers of the United Transpor¬ 
tation Union. IT appears to 
have access to figures con¬ 
cerning the railway s busi¬ 
ness. but declines to say what 
that access Is. 

Cooper said pasenger re- 
venenue for August alone was 
$32,000. while gross evenues 
for all of 1974 amounted to 
only $67,000 


Ski picture bright 
for Alberni crowd 


By JOHN HENDERSON 


PORT ALBERNI — Mt. Arrowsmith Rec 
reation Ltd. has been given the green light 
to proceed with development of the alpine 
area of the mountain for skiing, hopeful¬ 
ly for the coming winter. 

At a special meeting held this week to 
obtain a decision as to whether to proceed 
this year or to freeze current funding until 
next year, the company received a 98-per¬ 
cent vote to proceed according to its recom¬ 
mendations 

The recommendations were that the com¬ 
pany proceed with the engineering studies 
for two T-bars up the Cokley Ridge, with the 
purchase of the lower T-bar at a cost of 
approximately $114,000, and with the clear¬ 
ing for the higher T-bar in anticipation of 
receiving a grant from the provincial govern¬ 
ment. which would allow for its purchase this 
year as well. 

Prior to the vote, fund drive chairman Joe 
Van Bergen told the crowd of just under 
200 people that the local funding to dale since 
the drive began this spring has reached 
$108,000 

The money is being collected through the 
sale of $500 “memberships" in the local 
ski club, good for 10 years, and allowing for a 
10-per-cent reduction in tow fees and rentals 
at the ski resort during this period. 

At the end of the 10 years, the sum will be 
returned to the purchaser. 

Van Bergen told the meeting that there had 
been no definite word from the provfhcial 
department of recreation and conservation 
regarding the company’s application for a 
grant of $179,000 

He had been told, he said, that word could 
be coming out of Victoria as early as 
the first week in September. But the commit 
tee firmly recommended that there should 


be no firm commitment for the second T-bar 
lift until a favorable response had been 
received on the application, he said. 

The company had also applied for a grant 
from the federal government through the 
DREE program. It would be some time, he 
said, before the outcome of this applica¬ 
tion was known. 

In the meantime, the company had been 
successful in getting a grant under the 
Canada Works program for workers hired to 
clear the roadway and the trails on the 
mountain in conjunction with the project. 

In the past four years. Van Bergen said, the 
company had received more than $200. 
000 from the federal government in such 
grants. 

John Kasnik told the meeting that the road 
clearance had now reached the 3.500-foot 
level and wgs proceeding with all haste to 
meet a deadline of Sept 10 to reach the 
parking lot level of the alpine area. 

Hans Schaer, representative for the firm 
supplying the new lift equipment, assured the 
crowd that should other deadlines be met, 
there should be no problem in installing the 
new lifts in time for this year's skiing. 

Once the new installations were in. he said. 
Arrowsmith would become the “Whistler 
of Vancouver Island." 

On questions from the floor. Van Bergen 
assured the crowd that the fund drive 
would continue this fall. 

The crowd was also assured that on the 
basis of four years of studying conditions 
on the mountain, there would be sufficient 
snow in the new development area to ski from 
November to May. 

The logging of the road and trail clearance 
would bring m about $20,001, Van Bergen es¬ 
timated. sufficient to pay for the actual work 
involved. Moat of the work was on a voluntary 
basis in any case. 


see if It was still planning to proceed, after 
not hearing anything from the Arm on the 
proposal for a number of months. 

The proposal to ronstrnct a wood-waste 
recovery’ plant on the Domaa sawmill prop 
erty at Cowkhan Bay Is being processed 
through an environmental impact study 
under the provincial government's order-in 
council. 


Parental group 
is one up 
on bureaucracy 


By DEREK RH1ND 


DUNCAN — Cobble Hill 
and area parents concerned 
for the safety of their off 
spring, have won their battle 
to have courtesy bus service 
resumed for their children. 

More than 150 parents 
whose six-and-seven-year-old 
children would have been 
forced, when school resumed, 
to walk on the Trans-Canada 
and Shawnigan-Mill Bay 
highways, took their battle to 
the school board, regional 
district board and the min¬ 
istry of education, for the re¬ 
sumption of the bus serv ice, 
which school board recently 
cancelled. 

The parents learned of 
their victory w hen- School 
District 65 chairman Alan 
Hussey, following a meeting 
Friday with Darryl Muralt. 
administrative officer, min 
istry of education, said that 
“approval had been given for 
acquisition of an additional 
school bus." 

Hussey in a prepared state¬ 
ment released to the Colonist 
Thursday, said: “As a result 
of the meeting with Darryl 
Muralt, some positive actions 
will be implemented in the 
district transportation sys¬ 
tem as soon as possible. ^ 
“The board was disap¬ 
pointed that the ministry did 
not indicate a change of posi¬ 
tion relative to the provincial 
walk limits. The walk limits 
are the basis of calculating 
the grants from the provin¬ 
cial government to the local 
board to assist in the trans¬ 
portation operations. 

“They were pleased, how¬ 
ever. that as a result of a 
review by Muralt of bus 
routes in the south end of the 
district that approval was 
given to the acquisition of an 
additional bus to relieve sec¬ 
ondary student loads. 

“This additional approval 
was given as a result of a 
review of*thc regulations of 
the Motor Vehkles Branch, 
who recently took over the 
inspection function from 
RCMP. leaving the police 
force to deal more effectively 
with the enforcement of the 
safety conditions for bus stu¬ 
dents. 

“The board’s transports 
tion supervisor, Ernie Car¬ 
diff. indicated to the board 
that as a result of acquiring 
an additional bus, several re¬ 
visions would be made to ex¬ 
isting bus routes in the south 
end. and it would likely result 
in the majority of courtesy 
students now receiving trans¬ 
portation continuing to do 

“With the‘change in popu¬ 
lation within the district and 
the continuing growth in the 
south end. the acquisition of 


the additional bus is only the 
first step of an extensive re¬ 
view of the busing in the dis¬ 
trict and does not under any 
circumstances imply that the 
situation will not arise again 
in the future. 

“It will also not change the 
board's policy of adhering to 
the provincial walk limits to 
stop the board from contin¬ 
ually pressuring other local 
government bodies and the 
provincial highway depart 
ment to upgrade the existing 
roads in the district and in¬ 
stall safe pedestrian walk 
areas on these roads. 


Comox 

Valley 

stable 

COURTENAY-While 
pupil enrolments in many 
school districts in this prov¬ 
ince are showing a sharp de¬ 
cline, enrolment here is 
stable. 

The long-range prediction 
to 1983 shows an enrolment 
within 50 of the figure for 
1978-79. 

There are approximately 7,- 
300 students in Comox Valley 
school 

Any decline in pupil enrol¬ 
ment has an effect on staffing 
^oth at the teaching and 
clerical level. 

However, here again this 
district remains stable with a 
teaching staff of 380 perma¬ 
nent full-time equivalent. 

One of the factors affecting 
Courtenay school district is 
CFB Comox with its changing 
population. 

This year the base experi¬ 
enced a large turnover. 

However, with some ser¬ 
vicemen sent to Egy pt, fami¬ 
lies have opted to remain In 
the valley, adding to the 
school population. 

Staffing of schools attended 
by servicemen s children, 
especially the airport school, 
is always risky, but Superin 
tendent Tom Ellwood says so 
far the district has always 
guessed correctly. 

The only problem facing 
students, teachers and trus¬ 
tees is the opening date of the 
new high school at Comox. 

Opening date is not antici¬ 
pated before the end of Octo¬ 
ber and in the meantime, stu¬ 
dents who would normally 
attend the new senior high 
school, will be on shift-taking 
clasaes at Robb Road junior 
high between 12:15 and 5 
p.m. 


Chief loses in bid for new term 


PORT HARDY — Incumbent Band Chief 
Henry George has been defeated in a bid for 
another term and Kwawkewith Bantf members 
have elected Paddy Walkus as their new lead¬ 
er. 

He begins a two-year term as band chief, 
and was a four-year member of the band coun¬ 
cil. 

A third candidate in the election was Henry 
Bell. 

The band Includes Fort Rupert village with 
about 100 residents, and Tsulquate. slightly more 
than 200 people 


In Tsulquate, 76 per cent of eligible voters 
turned out while In Fort Rupert Interest was 
lower, with only five per cent of the voters 
casting ballots. 

' Alvins Walkus topped the polls for councillor 
with Nellie Walkus running second. Both are 
newcomers to the council. Others elected were 
Tom Henderson, Vivian Paul and Albert 
Walkus 

i * 

Running for a seat on council but not elected 
were Robert King, Lillian Johnny, Johnson Bell. 
Ernest Henderson and Martin Walkus. 


Last year all five councillors were elected by 
acclamation. 

> . ' f . u 

Both Tsulquate and Fort Rupert village are 
amalgamated but each band has separate ad¬ 
ministrative offices and Fort Rupert has an 
elected committee, which runs the dally affairs 
of the band. 

The lack of interest in the elections dis¬ 
played by Fort Rupert is believed due to the fact 
band members are satisfied with their own 
elected administrative setup. 


“The main thrust of the 
board will continue to centre 
around the roads in the south 
end, especially in the Shawni 
gan Lake. Mill Bay. Cobble 
Hill area.” the statement 
concluded 

Hussey told the Colonist, 
following Thursday’s meet 
ing with Muralt. he “wanted 
it understood that the bus w as 
being provided to relieve high 
school students, although it 
would mean that the cour¬ 
tesy rides given to students 
outside the walk limits in the 
Trans-Canada. Shawnigan 
Mill Bay Road areas would 
be resumed." 

The additional bus provid 
ed for students would relieve 
the overcrowding of present 
bus service and allow the 
courtesy ride students to be 
picked up 

Hussey laid the blame Tor 
the situation squarely on the 
Cowichan Yalley Regional 
District Board when he said 
“When the CVRD say this is 
not their problem, this is not 
the case. It is their problem 
“What we’re faced with 
here is a symptom of a major 
population shift. According to 
a federal government census, 
our population will double 
here by the year 2000. 

“This gets back to the 
CVRD, who are in charge of 
zoning connected with popu 
lation growth. They should 
not let the population expand 
In areas where it is not safe 
for adult or child pedestrians 
to walk on our roads." 

Cathy Barrie has been 
speaking for the 150 parents 
When told by the Colonist that 
their children would be 
bused, she said: “It looks like 
we’ve won the battle, but not 
the war. because this is not to 
say we won’t be faced with 
the same situation next 
year. 

“We will continue to fight 
for better conditions, for im¬ 
proved walkways along our 
highways and for reduced 
walk limits." 


Centre’s 
time set 


NANAIMO—New operat¬ 
ing hours for the Madrona 
Centre at Malaspina College 
have come into effect. 

The centre will be open to 
the public on weekdays be¬ 
tween 11 k.m. and 8 p.m. with 
the hours for Saturday, Sun¬ 
day and holidays set at 2-5 
p.m. 

The two galleries in the 
centre are currently display¬ 
ing Jack Wise: A Decade of 
Work. 

This is a travelling exhibi 
tion of superb quality sup¬ 
ported by a grant from the 
National Museum* of Canada 
and specially prepared for 
viewing at the Glenbow— Al¬ 
berta Institute, Calgary, the 
Art Gallery of Windsor, On¬ 
tario, the Confederation 
Centre Art Gallery. Charlot¬ 
tetown, P.E.L, the Simon 
Fraser University Gallery 
and the Madrona Centre. 

The Jack Wise exhibition 
will continue until Sept. 17 
and will be followed, between 
Sept. 21 and Oct. 12, by two 
very different shows. Captain 
Cook and the Mapping of the 
North Pacific, from the 
Simon Fraser Library Col¬ 
lection. and J. Frederick 
McCulloch. Works on Paper, 
also from Simon Fraser 


f 




-’<^ i, JJ.I [„iii jgl / 1 m i 


/ -.. 


















\ 


V.¥ * 

.18 

DAIUYCOLOMST^^rtonfl^^^SiUurdi^^egtcmber^U|ii^ 


BEFORE... 



Marc* Hazebrouck 



Croce 



Caywood-Moore 


Isn’t that 
whatsisface 
on stage? 


ATLANTA (UPI) — Sandwiched among the cotton 
candy stands, livestock exhibits and popcorn ven¬ 
dors, Danny O'Day unveiled his $500,000 “travelling 
clone show” Friday. 

“Now Elvis over there is our biggest attraction,” he 
said, pointing to an impersonator of the late singer. 
“You know how people are about Elvis. We even 
have a female Elvis. The sex doesn't matter.” 

O'Day is a 30-year-old. fast-talking promoter who has 
invested “at least” $500,000 into what he jokingly 

^ calls “my travelling clone show.” Appearing under 
the banner “Rock ‘N Roll Heaven.” it features five 
singers who hope to turn borderline professional 
careers into instant successes by impersonating 
dead singers.The impersonators are Mona 
Caywood-Moore, Marc Hazebrouck, Jesse Bolt, Erin 
Rhyne, and Duke O'Connell. 

On the very day his new proteges appeared, O'Day 
heard from an old one. Dennis Wise, who under 
O'Day's managership had his face remodelled ear¬ 
lier this year to look like Elvis Presley, filed suit 
against O'Day. 

In a $2,500 lawsuit filed Thursday in Orange County 
Circuit Court, Wise claimed that his act has been da¬ 
maged. 

“(O’Day) ... has wrongfully, unlawfully and mali¬ 
ciously endeavored to destroy the plaintiff’s career 
by creating an army of clones to undermine and to 
berate the plaintiff's image diminishing the 
unique character and marketability of the plaintiff 
and his performances,” the suit said. 

The “unveiling" came when the five — Janis Joplin. 
Jim Croce, Jim Morrison and the Elvis’ — appeared 
during the Southeastern Fair and took off masks to 
reveal what plastic surgery can do to make one look 
like someone else. 

It was the first of a series of promotional appearances 
for the troupe which will be followed by a blitz of 

* Europe — “where they really get off on this stuff,” 
said O'Day. 

Even before the group’s opening show, O’Day’s sing¬ 
ers acknowledged they have been criticized for 
trying to profit off someone else’s glory and accom¬ 
plishments. 

“A lot of people tell me it’s morbid to do something 
like this,” said Mona Caywood Moore, a 27-year-old 
Californian who had plastic implanted in her cheeks 
to more closely resemble Janis Joplin, the raucous, 
gravel-voiced rock singer who died of a drug over 
dose in 1971. 

“But I'm doing it out of respecU nothing else," she 
said. “As far as I'm concerned what they show on 
the 6 o'clock news is more morbid than what I’m 
doing. 

“Why am I doing this? I'd be crazy to sit here and tell 
you I'm not doing it for money. Isn't everyone in 
entertainment out for the big bucks?” 

For 28-year old Mark Hazebrouck, impersonating Jim 
Croce is simply a way of showing respect for the 
famous balladeer and author of the hits “Bad. Bad 
Leroy Brown.” I Have A Name” and “Don't Mess 
Around With Jim 

But it is also, said Ha/ebmuch. a clear shot at the 
big lime. “Let’s face it. I'll get exposure like I've 
never had before if the show is a hit.” 


...AFTER 




Jesse Bolt 



Presley 


Police 

fear 

losing 

sources 


TENDII} FOR WAT** PIPE 

stated tender* will be accepted for 
the supply end delivery of one truck 
load of ductile iron water pipe uo to 
It 00 a m Wednesday. September 9th 
t97| Ttte truckload i* to consist of a00 
feet of 4-mcti and fhe balance in e inch 
diameter pipe Prices are to be f ob 
Victoria. F S.1 exempt, copper con 
nectors not required delivery immedi 
ale 

The lowest nor any tender not nece* 
serllv accepted 

Greater Victoria Water District. 

479 island Highway. 

Victoria. BC V9B 1H7 


OTTAWA (CP) — Pro 
posed freedom of information 
legislation threatens police 
effectiveness in fighting or 
ganized crime and terrorism, 
police chiefs warned Friday. 

They urged the govern¬ 
ment to increase, not de¬ 
crease, protection of confi¬ 
dential police information, 
saying U.S. police have vir¬ 
tually been put out of the 
terrorist-fighting business 
because of the American 
Freedom of Information 
Act. 

Gus Wersch, secretary- 
treasurer of the Canadian As¬ 
sociation of Chiefs of Police, 
said networks of police infor¬ 
mants could dry up entirely 
because of provisions of the 
Canadian Human Rights Act 
and the federal freedom of 
information proposals. 

Calling this an “urgent, 
growing and extremely seri¬ 
ous problem. ' some HO police 
chiefs attending the associa 
lion's annual convention un 
animously adopted a resolu¬ 
tion urging the government to 
increase protection of confi¬ 
dential police information. 

Informers no longer talk to 
policemen because they are 
afraid their name will be 
made public if police files are 
released, Wersch. police 
chief in suburban Nepean, 
said in an interview. 


0* 


Invitation to Tender 

Sealed Tender*, marked 
JANITORIAL SERVtCCS 

MINISTER Of HIGHWAYS 
COMPLEX 
2902 Jacklin Road, 
Victoria. B C 

lor a period of two (2) years will be 
renewed up to 3 00pm local time 
the 20th day o* .-.eptember 19/8 
and those n ailable at the time will 
be openej in public at 301 Mer 
*ies S'-eet Victoria. B C . V8V 
2G8 ^ 

Tendeung documents may be 
Obtained at me ebove address 
aMer 9 OO a m on me 28m day of 
August 19/8 • 

Tenders must be tiled on me 
forms provided m sealed clearly 
marked envelopes 

The lowest or any Tender will 
not necessarily be accepted 
H Cronk 
Building Manager 


Senator gets backing 

Bryant defies 
death threats 


BOSTON (L PI) - Anita 
Bryant Friday endorsed 
Howard Phillips for the U.S. 
Senate and vowed not to be 
“intimidated” by alleged 
death threats apparently mo¬ 
tivated by her much-publi¬ 
cized fight against homosex¬ 
uality. 

A small group of well- 
wishers applauded Phillips. 
Miss Bryant, her husband 
and manager Robert Greene 
who were heavily guarded by 
police on arrival at Boston’s 
Logan Airport. 

The Florida singer, who led 
a crusade in Miami to repeal 
a homosexual rights ordi 
nance, was to have appeared 
Friday at a lundraising eon- 
cert for Phillips. 

He is thought an underdog 
in the six-way Sept. 19 Demo¬ 
cratic primary for ihe nomi¬ 
nation for the seat held by 
Sen."Edward Brooke, R- 
Mass. 

The concert was cancelled 
because of alleged ihrwis on 


her life, said Phillips, who 
was a Republican when he 
joined the Nixon administra¬ 
tion on orders to dismantle 
many of the federal govern¬ 
ment’s anti-poverty pro¬ 
grams. He has since switched 
his party registration. 

Discussing the alleged 
bomb threats. Miss Bryant 
said. “I'm still human. It still 
bothers me. But it is not my 
nature to be intimidated. 

“We’ve endured it... What I 
don’t understand are these 
people who talk about human 
rights when they deny me my 
freedom of speech.” 

Miss Bryant went to the 
Copley Plaza Hotel where she 
was to tape campaign adver¬ 
tisements for Phillips, whom 
she had not met until Friday. 
HCr husband said it was the 
first time she had endorsed a 
candidate. 

“I firmly believe in the 
man Howard Phillips. We 
stand together on the issues 
... He is pro-family and pro¬ 
life," Miss Bry ant said. * 


Manufacturer 
tax cut urged 


OTTAWA (UPI) - New 
Democratic Party leader Ed 
Broadbent Friday proposed a 
short-term industrial strat¬ 
egy that would cut manufac¬ 
turer's sales tax and personal 
income tax, while increasing 
government spending on pub¬ 
lic works. 

Broadbent, outlining his 
party's remedy for the coun¬ 
try’s high unemployment, 
near-10-per-cent inflation 
rate and faltering dollar, 
urged the federal govern¬ 
ment to take up the "eco¬ 
nomic slack” by reducing 
manufacturer’s sales tax 
from 12 to eight percent. 

The move would shave $1.5 


billion off government reve¬ 
nues but the lower prices 
would generate sufficient de¬ 
mand to create 75,000 jobs, he 
said. 

“A strong and growing 
manufacturing sector is ab¬ 
solutely essential to the fu¬ 
ture economic health of our 
country,” Broadbent said. 
“It is the catalyst which eco¬ 
nomically can sustain growth 
In other sectors, for exampl^ 
services.” 

He said the sales tax break 
would benefit consumers by 
reducing the cumulative 
"pyramid” costs of distribu¬ 
tion 





“UK^C jfffK TAl. ^ 

h tiJUL 


J) 




FANTASTIC! 
Village Antique Auction 

SALE OF SALES 

PBATUMSi Oak Renaissance, >0 piece Continental Dining Suite with Carved l-ront. Superb 
Walnut Chippendale-Style Desk with Leather Scribler Superb Brass Bracket Clock. Regency-Style 
Credenza with Bow Glass Doors. Victorian Chaise Lounge in Restored Condition. Superb Pair of 
Ruby Gtasa Lustre* with Glass Prisma Continental Three-Piece Soft Suite with Twist Support Arms, 
Mosf Superb Continental Carved Oak Cabinet. Victorian Mahogany Grandfather Clock. Two Superb 
Pieces of Satin Glass, Victorian Walnut Sewing Cabinet. Selection ot Two Walnut Coffee Tables 
Comptetely refimehed. Continental Golden Oak Dining Suite. Oriental Ginger Jar with Iron Red 
Dragon Decor. Selection of Victorian Restored Bedroom Chairs. Dressers. Sets of Dining Chairs. 
Selection of China Cabinets. Crystal Bedroom Lamp. Selection of Royal Doulton Toby Jugs. Fine Pair 
of Oriental Clolesone Vases. Washstands. Linen Cabinets. Selection of Commodes. Collectable 
Wedgewood Biscuit Barrel. Victorian Mahogany Bow Glass China Cabinet. Selection of Crystal 
Vases. Decanters and Wine Glasses. Selection of Royal Doulton Vases and JSrdenierres Selection 
of Oak. Walnut and Mahogany Bedroom and Diningroom Furmtura of every Description Selection ol 
Reproduction Victorian Walnut Furniture. Superb Victorian 3-Bottle Cruel Sets, Oak Wall Clocks. 
Selection ot Brass Decor Items. Oriental Satsuma Vase. Canadian Overlay Cranberry Brides Basket 
Kutam vase 


SALE DAYS: WEDNESDAY. SEPT. 6th at 7:30 P.M. 
THURSDAY, SEPT. 7th at 7:30 P.M. 


PREVIEW: WEDNESDAY — SEPT. 6th from 
NOON UNTIL SALE TIME 7:30 P,M. 


PLACE: VILLAGE AUCTION LTD. 

966 YatM Straat 

Victoria, 6.C. — 962-6242 



NOTICK TO CREDITORS 
AND OTHERS 

In tht matter ot the Estato or HELEN 
GERTRUDE MEWTON. loir ot 
Victoria. Britt** Columbia. Do 
coo*od 

NOTICE is heretiv given thot Crock 
♦or* end other* having claim* rooms* 
the estate ot the above named deceased 
arc hereby required to tend them to the 
undersigned Executor at 1057 Fort 
Street. Victoria B C before the 2nd 
dav of October. 1971 after which date 
the Executor will dt*tnbote the said 
Estate among me parties entitled 
thereto, having regard to fha claims ot 
which It than has notice 

MONTREAL TRUST 
COMPANY 
Executor 
By Its solicitor*. 

Messrs LISSON, McCONNAN, BION, 
O'CONNOR A PETERSON 


NOTICE +6 CRElJiTOks 

RE THE ESTATE OF RICHARD 
GERALD GORE LANfrTON, late 
at rrn East saamch Road. R * 2. 
seemchten. Rriti*n Columbia 
notice is hereby given mol 
creditor* and other* having claims 
aoamst the estate of the above named 
deceased are hereby required to send 
oertk ulers of such claims to the under 
stvwd t xecutor* at P O Box 510. Vic 
tone B C VSW 2P6 before the 27th 
dav of September 1978. after which 
dale the Executor* will distribute the 
said estate among# the persons ent* 
fled thereto, having regard only to me 
claims of which they shall than have 
had notice 

DOREEN GORE LANGTON and 
ROYAL TRUST CORPORATION 
OF CANADA 
Executors 

Bv Crease A Company, 
their Solicitors 


•AUCTION — TUESDAY 7 P.M. 1 

ON VIEW ONE DAY ONLY — MV OF SALE 


r ■■■ 

I Oak Chair A Rocker. Coombee 2 pee Chesterfield Ste . Small A 
I Boyes Chesterfield A Loveseat. Fr. Prov. Style Occasional 
I Chairs. Wat. Occ Tables. Corner Cabinet. Oak Dresser A 
I Buttef. Patio Settee A Chairs. Many More Fine Quality Furnish- 
| tags APPLIANCES Viking 2-Door Frost Free Fridge. Sanyo 
1 Portable Dryer. Elec Ranges MISC: Samsonite Luggage. 

■ Mossier Kitchen, Henry Herbert Upright Piano. Kirby Vacuum. 

■ JEWELRY: Approx. 25 Lots ind. Pocket Watches. Expensive 
\ Rotex Wristwalch, Estate Jewelry MUCH, MUCH MORE 


LUNDS 


AUCTIONEERS and 
APPRAISERS LTD. 
926 Fori St., Victoria 
Tel. (604) 386-3308 


SHERIFFS 

SALE 

Under and by virtue of e Wnt ol 
Seizure and Sale against the 
goods and chattels of 
Ive Erne 
purported te be 

One (1) 1973 Plymouth. Serial 
*RH41G3R21 7379 

I have seized end will otter for 
sale by public auction at Totem 
Towing 3321 Tennyson Ave. 
Victoria. B C on Friday, the 8th 
day ot September. 1978 at the 
hour of 10 00 o clock in the fbre- 
noon all the right title and interest 
the defendant has w the vehicle 
The vehicle may be viewed at 
3321 Tennyson Ave Victoria 
B C between the hours ot 8 00 
am and 6 00 pm Monday to 
Friday 

Terms ot Sale on a where Is as 
is basis, cash p*oe &*» Sales 

T *For further particulars apply to 
the office of the undersigned 
W A Lee. 

Sheriff 


Region No. V 


British Columbia Buildings Corporation 

Invitation to Tender 

Sealed Tenders, marked 
ALTERATIONS 
2631 Douglas Street, 

Victoria, B C 

will be received up to 3:00 p m. local time the 13th 
dav of September, 1978, and those available dt that 
time will be opened in public at 301 Menzies Street, 
Victoria, B.C., V8V 2G8 

Tendering documents mav be obtained at the 

above address after 9 00 a m on the 1st dav of 
September, 1978 

Tenders must be filed on fhe forms provided, in 
sealed, clearly marked envelopes 

The lowest or any Tender will not necessarily be 
accepted. 



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THI DAILY COLONIST 
AND VICTORIA TIMES 











































































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Colonist 


Showers , 
high 17 


Weather Details 


on Page 2 


No. 221 — 120th Year 


Vancouver Island'* leading newspaper since 185S ^ 

Victoria, British Columbia, Saturday, September 2, 1978 

- : -—-- 


15 c Daily, 50 c Sunday 


Jobless aid goes to job aid 



Cullen 

'stop spoon-teed’ 


OTTAWA (CP) - The fed 
eral government was 
damned and praised Friday 
for its proposals to reduce the 
number of unemployment in¬ 
surance claimants by about 
10 per cent and to increase 
spending on job creation. 

Unemployment insurance 
slashes, at a time when a 
million are jobless, would be 
-a "kick in the gut" to the 
unemployed and to seasonal 
workers in the economically* 
depressed.Atlantic provinces 
said Newfoundland Conser¬ 
vative James McGrath. 

His Tory colleague. Sin¬ 
clair Stevens of Ontario, said: 
"Thank God they realize 
their unemployment insur 
ance program is overly 
lax." 

But he .criticized the job 


$710 million slotted 
to create positions 


creation measures which 
would not be ready in time to 
help ease the anticipated high 
unemployment rate this win¬ 
ter. 

Bud Cullen, federal minis¬ 
ter of employment. Friday 
announced proposals for 
sharp cuts in the unemploy 
ment insurance program in a 
move ^to stop spoon feed¬ 
ing’’ 

The Cullen proposals would 
require legislation to become 
law. and bills probably would 
be introduced in the fall ses¬ 
sion of Parliament, unless it 


was dissolved for a federal 
election. Parliament is to re¬ 
sume Oct. 10. 

He coupled his proposal for 
major cost-cutting surgery 
on the unemployment insur 
ance program with an an¬ 
nouncement of plans to spend 
$710 million on job^reation in 
the 1979-80 fiscal year 

Hardest hit by (he proposed 
changes to the unemploy¬ 
ment insurance program 
would be young persons, sea¬ 
sonal workers and those re¬ 
luming to the labor force 
after a long absence. Also 


penalized would be repeating 
claimants. 

Benefits would be reduced 
and the government also pro 
poses to move toward “spe¬ 
cial recovery from high-in- 
come unemployment 
insurance claimants whose 
gross income, including un 
employment insurance, is 
more than $22,000 in any cal¬ 
endar year*’ 

Cuts in the unemployment 
insurance program would re¬ 
sult in savings of $580 million 
in the 1979-80 fiscal year. Cul 
len said. The $710 million to 
be set aside for employment 
strategy in that year "would 
come from $570 million in 
cash expenditures. $100 mil¬ 
lion in foregone tax revenue 
and $40 million in uneinploy- 
Page 2—Cash-switch 


Oil fever grips market 
over Dome Arctic digs 


ere** 


Oil fever gripped the Toronto Stock 
Exchange Friday as shares of Dome 
Petroleum Ltd. and Gulf Canada Ltd . 
partners in Beaufort Sea exploration, 
traded at high levels But the companies 
declined to comment on the significance 
of drilling in two wells. 

Trading in the shares of both com¬ 
panies was halted for about two hours on 
the Toronto and New York exchanges 
The trading ban also was put on Dome 
Mines Ltd., a Toronto-based gold pro¬ 
ducer and subsidiary of Dome Petro¬ 
leum. 

The Toronto :)00 index made a record 
one-day jump of 22.80 points to 1255.01 

The trading flurry followed several 


days of rumors that Dome and Gulf had 
made a major find at their Kopanoar and 
Ukalerk wells in the Beaufort. 

But Dome, in a prepared statement 
Friday, would only repeat what it an 
nounced a week ago—that Hs drills had 
uncovered hydrocarbon shows at both 
wells but more drilling Would bo re 
quired to "assess the s*/e or commer 
ciality of these hydrocarbon shows " 

In the same vein, a statement from 
Gulf said until both wells have reached 
their total depth of it.ooo feet and were 
logged and tested, "there is no basis for 
unusual market reaction." 

Dome closed Friday on the Toronto 
Stoc k Exchange up $12 at .$95 w hile Gulf ’s 
shares were up more than $5. Dome 
Mines shares rose $12. 


\ 

% 


‘Th© young 15 BYELECTI0NS RULE 0UT BIG TEST? - 

win get ‘Mini-vote’ set for Oct. 16 


clobbered’ 


Proposals by the federal government to make it 
more difficult to claim unemployment insurance were 
greeted by warnings from labor officials on Friday. 

In Vancouver, George Hewison otthe United Fish¬ 
ermen and Allied Workers Union said changes in eligi- 



Rondeau 

. visibly shaken 


MP found 
guilty 
of arson, 
conspiracy 


GRANBY, gue. (CP) - In¬ 
dependent Gilbert Rondeau 
became the first MP in 32 
years to be convicted of an 
indictable offence Friday, 
when he was found guilty of 
arson and conspiracy in con¬ 
nection with the burning of a 
building which he owned 

The 50-year-old MP refused 
any comment, leaving the 
courthouse shortly after 
Judge Denis Bouchard, who 
heard the case w ithout a jury, 
handed down his verdict and 
set a sentencing hearing for 
Sept. 11. 

Rondeau remains free until 
then, and his lawyers. Paul 
Lesage and Michel Robert, 
say it is too early to decide 
whether they will appeal. 

An indictable offence, a 
legal category reserved for 
more serious crimes, refers 
to any offence punishable by 
at least two years in prison 
Rondeau faces a maximum 
penalty of M years. 

In a 67-page verdict that 
took 90 minutes to deliver. 

Page 2—MP guilty 


bility requirements for 
unemployment insurance 
will be devastating to 
young people entering the 
work force and to seasonal 
employees. 

"Young people coming into 
the market, if they can't find 
a job—and let's face it. there 
aren't many jobs—will get 
clobbered Women on season¬ 
al work, who don’t get that 
much work opportunity, will 
get clobbered too.’’ 

Jack Munro. president of 
the International Wood¬ 
workers of America, said the 
federal government should 
resign. 

“I don’t believe how 
damned irresponsible this 
government can Jte,” Munro 
said. 

Dave McIntyre, of the B.C. 
Federation of Labor, said the 
changes were dishonest and 
political manoeuvering. 

B.C.’s Finance Minister 
Kvan Wolfe said while he is 
basically in favor of refine¬ 
ments to the unemployment 
insurance program, the cuts 
proposed by the federal gov¬ 
ernment will have a major 
impact on welfare pro¬ 
grams. 

I am more interested in 
seeing what approach the 
federal government is devel 
oping towards cast-sharing 
programs." Wolfe said 

In Toronto, the president of 
the Ontario Federation of 
Labor said proposed changes 
are nothing more than a 
political ploy that will appeal 
to society’s most negative 
forces. 

"The proposals show the 
government's insensitivity to 
working people and to the 
young in this country," Clif¬ 
ford Pllkey said in an inter 
view Friday. 



-~Co4«m*t ohoto bv Un AScKsin 


LABATT'S WORKER BUI Dunaway inspects first bottled beer off to come off 
conveyor in brewery in nearly three months. But wait at store is not over. 


Return of a true 
Canadian spirit 


By DON COLLINS 


• Breweries claim 160 million strike loss. 
Page 40 


Inside 


McGeer stands firm 
on 'pot' teachers 

—Page 10 

Jubilee Derby 
starts today 

—King Fisherman. 39 


Severe quake 
hits Taiwan 


TAIPEI. Taiwan (UPI) - 
A severe earthquake hit 
northern Taiwan today and 
the weather bureau said the 
tremors were so strong that 
all Its seismographs on the 
island were knocked out 
The bureau estimated the 
quake at six or more on the 
open-ended Richter scale. 


Background 

S 

Bridge 

25 

Church 

12,13 

Classified 

25-37 

Comics 

23 

Crossword 

2t 

Editorials 

4 

Entertainment 

29-22 

Family 

18 

Finance 

8,9 

King Fisherman 

39 

Marine Calendar 

22 

Provincial Court 

19 

Sports 

14-16 

Your Good Health 

18 


Look no longer for that first concrete 
sign of a true Canadian spirit. 

It's out there now in the pubs of the 
land, at the liquor stores, wherever thirsty 
men and women gather 
"They were asking for Canadian draft 
beer today and some of them didn’t like it too 
much when we said it wasn’t in yet.’’ one 
Victoria hotel waiter said Friday night 
It was a full day after the end of the 
three-month brewery shutdown and the pa 
triotic tastebuds were tired of waiting. 

Tbe first draft In a long time should hit 
the pubs today. But the news isn't as good for 
those who want to buy bottled Canadian beer 
at the government-operated stores. 

Spokesmen for the liquor distribution 
branch say there is a week to-10-day wait to 
clear the American stock, which is still 
coming in, and that it will probably take 
that long to get the Canadian bottled beer into 
full production again. 

That seems to come as a bit of a surprise to 
people like Robert Mussott. area manager 
for Labatt's. He said no less than 20.000 dozen 
bottles of Labatt’s were produced here Fri¬ 
day, but that It is up to the branch to sty 
where it Is to go. 


The first draft to grace the tables in 
Victoria today will come all the way from 
Vancouver Until things get back to normal. 


the Labatt's plant here is concentrating only 
on bottle beer, while its New Westminster 
plants churning out draft. 

And what does the thirsty public think of it 
all? 

"Look,” said one beer drinker. "I've 
been drinking hard stuff all this time and that 
isn’t really the w ay 1 like it. Normally 1 drink 
the kind of light stuff that is low on calories 
and alcohol content because of my weight. 
You can only get it in Canadian stock. And 
now they’re going to keep pushing the 
American stuff at me in the stores. This 
could mean war." 

The boys down at the pub weren't talking 
war. 

"Actually they're going pretty good on 
what they can get tonight," the waiter said. 
"But they know that tomorrow is another 
day, that the good old Canadian draft will 
be here again." 

It seemed enough to make a Canadian 
swell with pride, until the waiter dropped one 
more line. 

"Sure they like the Canadian taste. But 
that’s not the main reason. The main reason 
is that they’re tired of paying$1.25 a bottle for 
the Imported stuff when they can normally 
gel a glass of beer for 50 cents.” 

The Canadian spirit, It seems, has. a 
price tag. 


OTTAWA (CP) - Prime 
Minister Trudeau called Oct. 

16 byelections Friday in 
seven vacant federal ridings, 
a move that could rule out a 
fail general election 
The date coincides with 
byelections in eight other 
empty seats, and Trudeau 
added in a prepared state 
ment that his government 
"intends to proceed deter¬ 
minedly” with Us current 
economy recovery program 
But while the announce 
ment appeared to undercut 
the possibility of a general 
election this fall, opposition 
spokesman criticized Tru¬ 
deau for not making his in¬ 
tentions more clear 
"As usual the prime minis 
ter is vacillating.’’ said NDP 
Leader Ed Broadbenl 
There was still a possiblity 
Trudeau could return next 
Tuesday from his visit with 
the pope and announce a Nov. 

6 general election. 

Nothing of substance would 
be changed by the result of 
the byelections—Trudeau 
could not lose his majority 
-even if he lost all 15 seats 
The byelections would be 
cancelled if Trudeau calls a 
general election before Oct. 
16. But the byelection an 
nouncement appeared to 
make that possibility more 
remote, and a spokesman for 
the prime minister acknow 
ledged there certainly 
wouldn't he "an election at 
this time." 

By law. Trudeau can wait 
another 10 months before he 
Is forced to call a general 
election. But there has been 
speculation he might call a 
fall vote and spare candi 
dates the trouble of running 
first in byelections and then 
in a general election a few 
months later. 

The prime minister made 
the announcement in a news 
release shortly before a trip 
to Rome to attend the instal¬ 
lation of Pope John Paul. 

Currently, the 15 vacancies 
mean more than a million 
Canadians have no MP. 

Chief Electoral Officer 
Jean-Marc Hamel said he is 
ready, but adds that the stop¬ 
gap votes give rise to a num 
her of complications. 

The byelections would be 
fought on riding boundaries 


last used in the July 8, 1974 
election—boundaries that 
have since been changed 
under redistribution. 

Candidates nominated on 
the basis of new electoral dis 
tricts may, in some cases, 
have to be renominated. And 
old party riding associations, 


disbanded after redistribu 
lion, would have to be re¬ 
formed to run the cam 
paigns 

The vacant ridings reach 
from Humber-Sl George's 
St. Barbe in Newfoundland to 
Burnaby Richmond Della in 
British Columbia. 


No for Pierre 
may mean 
go for Socreds 


Bv JIM HUME 

Coloniit reoorler 

Is Premier Bennett waiting for Prime Minisier Trudeau 
to make his move before deciding whether or not to call a 
fall provincial election? 

While Bennett remains closed-mouthed on his election 
plans, he did change his hard-line "no election this year" 
stand during the taping of Capital Comment for Sunday 
viewing on CTV. 

Asked if there could be a fall election »n B.C . he was 
non-committal, repeating that there were several op 
tions — fall, spring, next fall. When asked if he would like 
to repeat earlier statements that he did not anticipate a 
provincial election this year, the premier slid off into a 
non-answer answer. 


TRUDEAU HAS INDICATED that his final decision will 
be made over the Labor Day weekend Bennett refuses in 
give any indication of when his decision will be made 

Close observers of the political scene appear evenly 
divided on the fall-versus-spring provincial election. 

Spring supporters point to the premier’s positive asser 
tions. repeated many times earlier this year, that he had 
no intention of calling an election in 1978. 

The fall supporters cite several "indicators:” 

• The high profile of the premier in recent weeks 

• A steady procession of government grants benefit 
ling most municipalities throughout the province. 

• High-profile cabinet ministers who instead of hand 
ing out press releases have suddenly started to hold press 
conferences. 

• Increased financial aid to senior citizens 

• The premier's new stance on election.timing, ( hang 
ing from "no" to "maybe." 


ONE PROMISE BENNETT says he intends to keep is 

that there will be no winter election of his calling 
The last provincial election was Dec. 11. 1975. 

If Trudeau decides to go to the polls in November, now 
his earliest possible date, there is little .doubt that Ben* 
nett will wait for spring. 


If Trudeau decides to wait till spring. B.C. could go lo 
the polls in late October. 


Trash can 
yields 
bank bonds 


V ANCOUVER (CP) - 
An elderly man wearing 
tattered clothes was look 
ing through garbage cans 
in the city’s downtown 
district Friday when he 
discovered $500,000 in 
Royal Bank of Canada 
treasury bonds that could 
be cashed by the bearer. 

The unidentified man. a 
resident of a Salvation 
Army hostel, immedi¬ 
ately turned in the five 
certificates worth $100, 
000 each to a Royal Bank 
branch. 


Munro enters 
airline dispute 


MONTREAL (CP) - 
Labor Minister John Munro's 
intervention in the dispute 
between Air Canada and the 
union representing its 7.500 
ground-service workers 
raised new hope for a settle¬ 
ment Friday in a conflict 
which had seemed dead¬ 
locked beyond solution for 
more than a week 


Air Canada president 
Claude Taylor issued a state 
ment an hour after Munro's 
announcement, saying he 
welcomed "the willingness of 
the federal minister of labor 
to become involved in ail cf 


fort lo resolve (he current 
contract dispute ” 

The International Associa 
tion of Machinists, for its 
part, said it would try to find 
three more representatives 
from its Montreal local to fill 
the vacancies left on the no 
tiongl negotiating committee 
by the resignation of previous 
Monlreal-area bargainers. 

The news from Ottawa, 
calling both sides to a meet 
ing in the capital Sunday 
' morning, came just as 1AM 
negotiators were on the verge 
of leaving Montreal in de 
spair to return home for the 
long Labor Day weekend 
































laiig Mmisi 


Section Two 


Saturday, September 2, 1978 


\ 


4 

Page 17 




L 


ESSO CAR CLINIC 
^ I TESTED USED CARS 



Government policy target of placards 


—Colonist Otwto by lan McKam 


Workers protest layoffs 


Hit by one layoff and facing other* a* a result of 
federal spending cuts, construction and maintenance 
defence employees at Dockyard took to the street 
during their lunch break Friday to take their case to 
the “taxpaying public.” 

The demonstration—to illustrate that contracting 
out of work would cost more in the long run, and that 
job loss would probably strip the Victoria economy of 
$5 million—failed to convince at least one woman. 

She apparently mistook the sign carriers for strik* 
ers and became involved in a shouting match. Wit 
nesses said that at one point her car was rocked by a 
group of men. The woman said demonstrators broke a 
car window and that one man pulled some of her hair 
out. She said she intended to lay charges. 

However, late Friday night Esquimau police said 
they had been investigating the case, but so far had 
found no evidence on which to charge anyone 

Friday’s short demonstration had its begihning 
last week with the layoff of 17 short-term workerras a 
result of what the Public Service Alliance of Canada 
says is the first job loss of many to come through 
spending cuts. 

I-en Lightfoot. president of Local 101k of the Union 


of National Defence Employees (a component of the 
182.000-mem her PSAC). said 43 casual employees are 
due to be fired next Friday, and that close to 50 
others—some with as much as three years’ service- 
will be gone by the end of October 

The Colonist reported earlier that the PSAC feared 
as many as 500 federal employees on Vancouver 
Island may lose their jobs as part of a plan to cut the 
working ranks across the country by 5,000. 

Lightfoot said Friday the taxpayer will be saddled 
with bigger costs in the long run because “construc¬ 
tion and maintenance programs have increased with 
the jobs being contracted out as political plums.” 

He believes as many as 200 jobs will be lost in 
Victoria alone. 

“Instead of slashing costs for contract work, the 
government is picking on its own employees as the 
whipping boys and making them pay for its own inept 
policies." 

There were demonstrations at other Canadian 
bases Friday and Lightfoot expects there will be 
repeat performances if the government doesn't change 

its policy. 


E&N fighters keep 
flushing out facts 


The E and N Steering Com 
m it tee was flushing out some 
interesting figures Friday— 
some good and others a little 
on the delicate side , 

Committee chairman .John 
Cooper felt even CP Rail 
might change its mind about 
the economic future of the 
little passenger service after 
learning that revived interest 
in the E and N had provided it 
with 8.400 passengers last 
month—some 900 more than 
had boarded the train during 
all of 1976. 

While he had a battery of 
Other optimistic figures. Coo¬ 
per said the E and N is sud¬ 
denly faced with a shortage 
of toilets 

The regular 70-seat car has 
one toilet, still functional, he 
said, but one of the two on the 
mt-seat addition broke down 
U&t week. 

“It's incredible, but we now 
find that CP Rail, even 
though it has dozens and 
dozens of these cars, has only 
one spare toilet left.’’ said 
Cooper. 

The spare Is apparently on 
Us way from Montreal, but he 
wasn’t sure when it might be 
expected—or what would 


happen now if another toilet 
dies and there are no spares 
left. 

To Cooper and other rail¬ 
way buffs, the situation 
brings back the old haunting 
refrain: “Passengers will 
please refrain from flushing 
toilets when the train is 
standing in the station." 

With today's shortage, 
however, they say it’s simply 
a matter of refraining “till 
the other biffy gets here.” 

The figures projected by 
the committee would indicate 
that more than one toilet (and 
train) would be in order. Coo¬ 
per feels the passenger ser 
vice will have carried 40. 
000 by year’s end. siqje 
loadings to date have alread> 
topped 26.000. 

“It’s ironic that only eight 
months ago this same service 
was ordered abandoned by 
the Canadian Transport 
Commission on the grounds 
that it was uneconomic and 
likely to remain so.” Cooper 
said 

The CTC ruled in favor of a 
CP Rail application to drop 
the historic passenger ser¬ 
vice that serves Vancouver 
Island from Victoria to Cour¬ 


tenay. but has put off the date 

of execution to Dec. 13 to 
allow the province to chal¬ 
lenge the ruling in the 
courts. 

The committee was formed 
by E and N employees, mem 
bers of the United Transpor 
tation Union. It appears to 
have access to figures con 
ceming the railway’s busi¬ 
ness, but declines to say what 
that access is. 

Cooper said passenger re¬ 
venue for August alone was 
$32,000. while gross revenues 
for all of 1974 amounted to 
only $67,000 


Fair shake 
for 

Joe Clark 

Federal Conservative lead 
er Joe Clark will be at the 
Saanichton fairgrounds on 
Monday for some old-fa 
shioned handshaking and 
baby-kissing at the Saanich¬ 
ton Fall Fair. 

Clark is expected to arrive 
at the grounds between 2 
and 5 p m., said Allen 
Houghton, a Victoria enter 
tainment manager who is 
handling Clark's public rela¬ 
tions at the local level. 

It will be a quick stopover. 
Houghton said 


Leach River diversion 

Licensing conflict: 
More water or fish? 


By NANCY BROWN 


A scheme to divert the Leach River into Sooke Lake 
is being held up because federal fisheries officials want 
the water in the Sooke River for fish, according to Ron 
Upward, commissioner for the Greater Victoria Water 
District. 

“Somewhere around the 1990s somebody is going to 
have to make a big decision—do they want water or do 
they want food." he said. 

AT PRESENT the plan is to divert the Leach and so in 
crease the runoff into Sooke Lake. The water board would 
want only 20 per cent of the annual 5 billion gallons that 
is in the Leach every year. 

However, fisheries officials want the licence to stipulate 
fhat the board remain limited to the 20 per cent for all 

time. 

The water commission applied for the water rights li¬ 
cence • year ago. but it has still not come Through be 
cause of the dispute over the wording on the licence 

“THE CRISIS will come in the mW 1990s," said Upward 
”By then the city will have grown enough that the full 
capacity of the Sooke reservoir will be needed, and 
someone—thank goodness it won't be me—will have to 
decide which way to go. They’ll either have to limit 
city growth, or provide water 

“By then, who knows, food may well be more important 
than water and the decisis will be to provide for fish 
first and people second.” 

But, Upward said, he is not prepared to make any com 
mitment on the subject at present. He wants an open 
licence with final decisions to be made later in light of con¬ 
ditions at that time. 

“By 1995 we will know better what the priorities are,” 
he said. 

ACCORDING TO Upward, there is storage in Sooke 
Lake for up to 4 V4 billion gallons of water. But the flow from 
the Sooke River in a dry year is not sufficient to fill the lake 
if it has been drawn down to a very low level. 

The Leach is the major tributary to Sooke River, 
with a flow of 12 billion to 15 billion gallons a year, against 
Sooke River’s 7V* billion gallons 

“We would want only about 3 billio%gallons a year from 
the l^ach and leave the rest for the fish," Upward said. 

Concrete and tunnel work for the diversion would cost 
about $500,000. and the money is sitting in the bank. “We 
don’t like having money in the bank like that," he said 
“It is earning about 7^ per cent interest, while the rate 
of inflation Is around 12 per cent, so that we lose money 
all the lime we are waiting for a decision." 

HE POINTED OUT that the district will be picking up 
20.000 to 25,000 new customers next year when the Saanich 
Peninsula water line is completed, and with the recently-an 
nounced aid to reduce water rates there, fanners will be 
able to afford to use water for irrigation, so it is difficult 
to estimate how much water will be needed 

However, he felt that demand will increase around 
500 million to 700 million above the present demand of 
some 8 billion gallons annually. 

“The point is that if we have a dry summer and let 
that reservoir get low, and then we have a dry winter 
with low runoff, we won’t be able to refill the reservoir 
enough for the following summer unless we can use some 
of the flow from the Leach." 

Upward said provision has still been made for raising 
Sooke Lake Dam another 25 feet if necessary. 

THE WATER DISTRICT is at present negotiating for 
rights on the Canadian National Railways right-of-way 
which is being abandoned. When the dam has to be raised, 
the right-of-way will be on the level that will be flooded. All 
of the roads around the lake will also have to be moved. 

Upward said there is no intention at present to raise 
the dam. but the district is carrying on with logging of 
the area and with acquiring rights and moving roads so 
that there will be no problems when the additional reservoir 
capacity is needed, probably sometime in the 1990s 


DRIVER KILLED 
IN 2-CAR CRASH 

A 20-year-old Greater Victoria man died Friday 
following a two*car accident in driving rain on Sooke 
Road. . 

The dead man was the driver of one of the cars, 
which crossed over the centreline into the path of a 
westbound vehicle, Colwood RCMP said. 

He was pronounced dead on arrival at 7:30 p.m. at 
Victoria General Hospital. 

Six people ^ all were involved in the two-car 
accident, police added. Three received minor injuries 
and were taken to Victoria General 

No names were released. 


UVic opening 

300-bed 

residence 


Telephones. Smoke detec¬ 
tors. Controlled entrances. 
Individual thermostat con¬ 
trols. 

And if you’re a boy, there’s 
a girl. And vice-versa. But at 
a respectable distance. Like, 
on the next floor. 

Co-educational living at the 
University of Victoria hasn't 
become any more snug than 
that so far. but what there is 
of it will be there with all 
those other new features in 
the new 300-bed residence 
complex that will greet UVic 
students this year. 

The complex, which will 
boost on-campus accommo¬ 
dation to 900. will be officially 
opened at 11:30 a.m. Friday 
by Senator Ray Perrault 

Named Gordon Head, the 
new residence will have three 
halls. 

University officials say 
that if enrolment remains the 
same this year there will be 
on-campus accommodation 
for 13 per cent of the under 
graduate population com¬ 
pared with eight per cent last 
year. 

There Is one other impor¬ 
tant difference: In the past 
on-campus living was res¬ 
tricted to first and second- 
year students. Now it will in¬ 
clude those in third and 
fourth year programs 


Shirley Baker, manager of 
Housing and Conference Ser 
vices, says UVic president 
Howard Petch recognized the 
need for additional quarters 
after spending the first six 
months of his term living in 
residence. He’s been involved 
in the project ever since. 

According to literature 
prepared by the university, 
the four-floor complex will 
have a co educational princi 
pie “based on the concept 
that the social development 
of young men and women is 
aided by living in the same 
building." 

The university says this 
was successfully tested in Sir 
Arthur Currie Hall of the 
Craigdarroch complex where 
the ground floor houses male 
students and the second and 
third floors, females. 

Mariner tribute 

The Thermopylae Club will 
hold a ceremony at 2:30 p.m. 
on Kept. 10 at the grave of 
Captain Joshua Freeman at 
Ross Bay cemetery. Free 
man was master of the clip¬ 
per-type Glory of the Seas for 
20 years (1884-1904). The ship 
carried coal between Vancou¬ 
ver Island and California. A 
wreath will be placed on the 
grave. 


Firemen would welcome water line 


A permanent water line 
carrying Sooke Lake water 
to North Saanich’s Ardmore 
area could be a boon in the 
event of a major fire, Ard 
more ratepayers past presi 
dent Harold Parrott said Fri¬ 
day. 

The Ardmore area has a 
history of not wanting out¬ 
side water service, and con¬ 


tinues to favor its own irfde 
pendent well water supply 

Regional planning provides 
for a 12-inch main from the 
Saanich Peninsula’s perma¬ 
nent line to serve the Ard¬ 
more area within the next 
decade, possibly boosting the 
line's $4.6 million price tag. 

The province recently fun¬ 


nelled a $3 million capital-in 
terest fund into the main line, 
aiong with other cost-reduc 
tion programs 

Parrott said in an inter 
view that a reliable water 
supply would be a “built-in 
safety factor" for the North 
Saanich volunteer fire de- 
pa rtmeftt. 

The volunteer department 


was top-notch. Parrott said, 
but if faced with a major con 
flagration. would need a reli¬ 
able water supply. 

A permanent water supply 
would also “be a tremendous 
safety factor because of the 
value of houses presently 
there.’* Parrott said. 

More than 300 families live 


in the area in homes up to 

$ 100,000 

“It could mean the differ 
ence between partial and 
total loss and could be a fac¬ 
tor in keeping insurance 
rates down.” he said. 

The cost of a line to the 
area might be high, but costs 
of a major fire could be 
even higher. Parrott said. 


Some <4>cninsula residents 
have argued that Ardmore 
groundwater should be re 
tained for farming, in light of 
keeping the area rural 

They fear a water line 
might bring massive residen 
tial development, not to men 
tion the costs of paying for 
the serviced water. 



Tryouts 
popular 
at pool 

Victor!*’* Crystal Pool reo¬ 
pened Friday, with free 
swimming for all, and free 
accent t* the new exercbe 

mom, vauaa and fwlrlpoot. 
Pool had bee* closed for 
renovations since early May 
ahd Its reopealag brought 
lineups. Free swimming con¬ 
tinues over the Libor Day 
weekend. Also Friday, the 
provincial government sent a 
cheque for $77472 to the city 
as Its one-third share of the 
coot of the project which saw 
Installation of electronic tim¬ 
ing equipment and under¬ 
water speakers and lights. 
Pictures show sauna and ex¬ 
ercise equipment la me. 
















* A 























* 


c 


i ■' 


/ 


£ 


' 1 


I 







RENE 


SIMARD, Can¬ 
ada's teenage singing star 
CBC-TV’s The 


back, 


Rene Simard Show. 


KAREN KAIN, dancer 
with the National BaHet of 
Canada, headlines her 
own CBC-TV Soperspecial 
in the 1078-’78 season. 


DON HARRON, the multi¬ 
talented radio/stage per¬ 
former is the subject of a 
side-splitting “roast” on 
CBC-TV. 


UOtyA BOYD, one of Can¬ 
ada’s top classic gui¬ 
tarists, headlines her own 
CBC-TV Superspecial 
“Liona”. ' 


ANNE MURRAY, Can 
ada’s top songbird, head¬ 
lines her own CBC-TV Su¬ 
perspecial “Anne Murray 
in Jamaica”. 


CHRISTOPHER WARD,* 
Canadian pop singer-song¬ 
writer, is host of CBC- 
TV’s new after-school va¬ 
riety series. Catch Up! 


Top Shows Blend in CBC Schedule 


V ■ 


Each September marks a 
new beginning for television 
networks. This fait, many fa¬ 
vorites will return to CBC 
with new episodes, while sev- 
eral shows make their 
debuts Blending top Cana 
dian and American program 
ming. the 1978 79 schedule 
has something for everyone. 


back, as will the charming 
Muppets, whose show will ap 
pear on the full CBC network 
for the first time. 


^Fourth Season 


The coming season s “Su- 
perspecials” will present 
such headliners as Xaren 
Kain, Toller Cranston, Andre 
Gagnon, Anne Murray, 
Wayne and Shuster, the Irish 
Rovers and Don Harron 


Successful Show 


Rene Simard guides his 
highly successful show into a 
second season of music and 
comedy, while Mary Tyler 
Moore returns to weekly tele¬ 
vision in a variety revue. 
Other forms of song and 
dance will be the focus of 
“Musicamera,” a series 
which will study the Toronto 
Symphony, Franz Schubert, 
the Vancouver Chamber Or¬ 
chestra and the National Bal¬ 
let, among others. Country 
star Tommy Hunter will be 


Comedy itself has the spot 
light in “King of Kensing 
ton,” entering its fourth sea 
son of following the times and 
troubles of Larry King (por 
traced by A1 Waxman). Since 
his wife Cathy has left him. 
Larry is now forced to deal 
with bachelorhood—and his 
ever-present mother (Helene 
Winston). The people who 
comprise a radio station are 
the characters of “WKRP In 
Cincinnati," the tale of an 
old-fashioned station with 
poor ratings and the ambi¬ 
tious young man hired as pro¬ 
gram director to save It. 


Literally way-out humor 
will be provided by “Mork 
and Mindy," about a being 
from another planet (Robin 
Williams) who meets a lovely 
young Earthling (Pam 
Dawber). “Rhoda," “Barney 
Miller,” “Three’* Com 
pany," “M*A*S*H” and “The 
Wonderful World Of Disney" 


return, and weekly repeats of 
“The Mary Tyler Moore 
Show" and “All In The Fam¬ 
ily” will also continue. 

Dramatic programs on the 
CBC slate include two Cana¬ 
dian hits, as well as new 
American imports. “The 
Beachcombers” sail into an¬ 
other season of exciting ad¬ 
venture between opponents 
Nick Adonidas (Bruno 
Gorussi) and Relic (Robert 
Clothier). This season, they’ll 
be joined by the popular 
Diane Stapley, playing an 
RCMP Constable who will 
provide romance for Nick. 
Hardhitting police sergeants 
Nick Raitt (Donnelly 
Rhodes) and Glenn Olsen 
(Jonathan Welsh) are back to 
detect and prevent Crime on 
“Sidestreet,” which will fea¬ 
ture an episode filrped at the 
indoor quarter horse show 
Quarterama ’78. 


with “The Great Detective.” 
starring Douglas Campbell 
as a real-life Victorian inves 
tigator. “The Canadians” 
dramatizes the lives of fascl 
nating but little-known citi¬ 
zens of the past, and “The 
Albertans” is set against the 
backdrop of oil and cattle 
country. 


Series Expanded 


them returnees from past 
seasons. Veteran broadcas¬ 
ter tan Parker becomes the 
third host of “The Fifth Es¬ 
tate, ’’ joining Adrienne 
Clarkson and Eric Mailing 
for top investigative journal¬ 
ism. “For The Record” 
dramatizes the society in 
which we live, ranging in 
topic from ethnically mixed 
marriages and identity crises 
to dreams about one’s fu¬ 
ture. 


Pinsent to Star 


New episodes of “A Gift To 
Last,’’ starring Gordon Pin- 
sent as the uncle of a turn of- 
the-century family in rural 
Ontario, will share a time slot 


“Dallas," based upon this 
summer’s successful mini-se 
ries, will expand the saga of 
the wealthy Ewing family of 
Texas with Larry Hagman 
and Barbara Bel Geddes re¬ 
prising their roles. “WEB.” 
center* on the television in : 
dustry and a competitive 
young woman (Pamela Bell 
yood) fighting her way 
through the tough corporate 
world. The pressures, suc¬ 
cesses and failures of law 
students make up “The 
Paper Chase,” with John 
Houseman re-creating his 
Academy Award-winning 
role as a law professor from 
the movie of the same name. 

Information and news pro¬ 
grams will abound, all of 


Marketplace 


“Marketplace” hosts Joan 
Watson and Harry Brown 
continue to inform consum¬ 
ers how to get the most (and 
best) for their dollar, and 
“Ombudsman” Robert Coo¬ 
per aids ordinary citizens in 
dealing with private institu 
tions and governments. Peter 
Kent hosts a new season of 
“CBC Newsmagazine” and 
Patrick Watson takes “The 
Watson Report” behind the 
headlines for examination of 
the people who make deci¬ 
sions affecting all Cana¬ 
dians. 

“Fortunes,” in Its second 


season, concerns itself with 
Canada's economic issues as 
viewed by the Agriculture 
and Resources Department 
“Man Alive” is designed to 
Inform and enlighten viewers 
about the spiritual dimen 
sion of everyday life; it opens 
its 12th season with Roy Bon 
isteei as host. 

“The Nature Of Things,” 
with host David Suzuki, will 
share a time slot with “Sci¬ 
ence Magazine.*’ “Front 
Page Challenge” is back for 
an incredible 22nd season, 
and “This Week In Parlia 
ment” will also resume with 
correspondent Bill Casey 


Great Variety 


The 1978-79 CBC lineup 
offers a great variety of pro 
gramming. (Certain pro 
grams may not be telecast in 
some areas). Spanning the 
gamut from drama to com 
edy and music to news, the 
schedule offers something to 
please virtually everyone .. 
whether your favorite hap¬ 
pens to be Patrick Watson or 
The Fonz. 


£ 




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* 


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— 



















PAGE TWO 

^ PAYOFF PUZZLE - 

' Correct Anwm to Last Week's Puzzle 

n i v\h x^aasaftsapc 


□ i3 13 flrtaa 
oosanniiD □ □ 

□ □ 0 iinno 

mmmdmmla □ 

H 


SOAP OPERA SCENE 

Writer Pacifies Al 



e CLUES ACROSS 

4. CLIP not slip “CUP" links up more Ideally with the 
clue's word “firmly." Slip easily, says, would be a 
more apt Idea than “slip firmly." 

I. RECENTLY not decently. Having been RECENTLY 
painted, etc., it shouldn't yet have deteriorated below 
the acceptable. "Decently" lacks point, since one 
takes it for granted that the room has been reason¬ 
ably well decorated anyway. 

$. HAIR not fair. A man grooms actresses or models, 
etc., rather than "the fair" (an unnatural express* 
ion) * 

t. COUCH not pouch. It is In a COUCH, more particu 
lariy, Wat one looks for softness as the desired 
ylH y. 

11. VETS not pets. Being only human. It Is inevitable that 
VETS (veterinarians) cannot totally satisfy absolute 
ly everybody. It is the function of pets to be pam 
pered. etc., rather than to b« "satisfactory" In any 
exacting practical sense. 

II. TANK not bank. The term "second best" relates 
ostensibly to some sort of contest, and thus Implies a 
degree of comparability — as between a car and a 
military TANK. “Bank (earthwork, lie.) Is less apt 
In this way. h 

H. SAP not sad. You cant call him a sap just on the basis 
of one stupid lapse. If the fame was important, he 
may indeed be sad. 

17. Slam not slap. Since a slap could be playful, SLAM. In 
the sense of criticizing severely. Is the stronger 
answer. 

It. SEEK not seem. The indirect nature of the word 
seem, meaning merely to give the appearance of 
doing a thing, is undesirably particularly since the 
chic's phr ase: “ you have the feeling that" is already 
Indirect. “SEEK" is more satisfactory in the context 
given. 

S3. PRICED pot prized. As suggested, it Is open to people 
to agree or disagree with a high PRICE asked. The 
fact of a thing being hf|$ly prized has no particular 

' rw ow ertieo with what anybody else might think. 

$4. RUGGED not ragged. To say that a thing “can" 
happen, “of course," implies improbability (as of a 
RUGGED defense being repeatedly pierced) rather 
than likelihood — as of ragged defense yielding 
goals. 

25. RESIST not desist. One may be constrained to desist, 
but the clue’s phrase: “one’s response may well be to 
"suggest a reaction against the pressure 
CLUES DOWN 

I. REPORTS not retorts. The phrase: "A fine command 
of words" relates to high competence in the use of 
English (in REPORTS), rather than a quick witted 
facility in making clever retorts. 

1. PLOW not slow. The clue suits something that may be 
speeded somewhat, or in which (me seeks a good 
working speed but which remains characteristically 
steady going, not "really fast." “Slow," simply the 
opposite of “fast," is not a good answer. 

$. PARKS not Paris. The moderate phrasing of the clue 

(9Can be said to be.") favors a facility — 

national or other PARKS — rather than a national 
capital (Paris). In any case, !t Is reasonable to relate 
the clue to one’s own nation. 

It. CAKE not cage or case. CAKE Is the most natural 
answer since there is no particular aptness in the 
idea of a home-made cage or case (or cape). Also, the 
clue hints that this is an ordinary thing for a woman 
(not the average man) to make. 

14. SAYING not saving. SAYING much In little time 
comes more easily to articulate, uninhibited types. 
Saving related to income, etc., not especially to the 
person’s type. 


By JOHN GOUDAS and 
STEVEN SCHEUER 

NEW YORK — “I never 
solve a crime," Al Freeman 
Jr. always used to tell the 
press when queried about his 
role of police LL Ed Hall on 
* One Life to Live.” 

To pacify Al, who happens 
to be a very good actor and a 
golf nut, boss Gordon Russell 
turned the cop Into a hero in 
one bold stroke. Hall not only 
solved a murder, but made 
Captain to boot. 

That’s called keeping the- 
workers-happy, one of Rus¬ 
sell’s tasks as the soap's writ¬ 
er-producer in New York. Out 
in Hollywood for a week, 
which meant he had to get 
ahead on his writing in order 
to leave town, Russell dis¬ 
closed a searing trauma des¬ 
tined for the Halls this fad. A 
happy marriage stretches to 
form a triangle when wife 
Carla Hail is romantically 
overpowered by an aggres¬ 
sive surgeon. Carla will fall 
in love, and hate herself, and 
go through bell. After a suit¬ 
able period of misery, ma¬ 
nipulator Russell and associ¬ 
ates have to break up the. 
romance, of course. 

The Hollywood visit may 
give the producer more Ideas 
about a proposed story line on 
a young country’ singer who 
comes west to seek fame and 
glory. Also, Russell hopes to 
continue with the plotting of a 
talk show host. After Hugh 
Downs popped up as a sur¬ 
prise guest not too long ago, 
overtures were made to Jack 
Lemmon for a visit during his 
Broadway run of "Tribute." 
So far the idea comes under 
the heading of wishful thlnk- 
ing. 

A soap opera writer for 
more than decade, Gordon 
Russell has his hands full 
keeping track of everything 
since the one-hour format is 
here to stay. “I get to write 
once in a blue moon," Gordon 
admits. "When we went to 
the hour format, my job be¬ 
came 75 per cent administra¬ 
tive." 

Russell spends more time 
w ith charts and logistics than 
he does at the type*writer. He 
must keep track of the com¬ 
ings and goings of 30 contract 
players. 

Fans, though, like the ex¬ 


panded-hour form, the pro¬ 
ducer admits, and the writers 
and actors have adjusted to 
longer hours and better pay. 

To keep up, Russell works a 
7 a m.-to-7 p.m. day. Gordon 
tapes the show in the after¬ 
noon so he can see it later, 
and claims he gets his best 
Ideas for future stories by 
watching. 

Despite his demanding 
schedule, Russell looks 
bright and bushy-tailed. 
What’s his secret? The 
ponies, gang. He’s a trifecta- 
nut (that's picking them one- 
two-three). With two other 
partners, Russell claims to 
have hit 13 trifectas so far 
this season with payoffs 
averaging 1700. 

"I keep my sanity by going 
to the track on weekends," he 
said. 

Spoken like a true addict! 

CHANNEL CHATTER. 
The beautiful new girl on 
"Search for Tomorrow" Is 
Megan Bagot. Megan plays 
Laine Adamson, the daughter 
of Ted Adamson in the show 
and this marks her very first 
soap role. Megan has done 
some stage work, but her ex¬ 
perience has been mostly In 
nightclubs. She went on a 
world tour as part of Engel¬ 
bert Humperdinck’s show. 
Another new face on 
"Search’’ is Christopher 
Goutman. who is playing 
Marc D’Antoni, the new 
drama teacher at Henderson 
University. Chris appeared 
opposite Marilyn McIntyre 
(she's Carolyn Hanley in 
"Search") in the Off-Broad¬ 
way production of "The 
Promise" .. . Crime doesn’t 
pay — not on TV soaps. Two 
villains bit the dust recently 
on "Edge of Night ”;:Tony 
Saxon (played by Louis 
Turenne) and Raney Cooper 
(played faty Kell Martin) have 
met their demise in the soap. 
Warren Burton is now play¬ 
ing Eddie* Dorrance in "All 
My Children," having re¬ 
placed Ross Petty, who left to 
pursue new career goals .. . 
Soap fans in Sullivan, III., and 
the environs will probably 
want to catch the current pro¬ 
duction of "Star Spangled 
Girl" playing at Guy Little’s 
Theatre. Starring in the Neil 
Simon comedy are Kelly 
Wood and Dennis Cooney 



(they play Mary Ellison and 
Jay Stallings, respectively, la 
“As the World Tuns") plus 
Tony Craig (he’s Draper 
Scott In “Edge of Night") and 
they have been being direct¬ 
ed by Peter Ratray (he plays 
Scott Phillips In "Search for 
Tomorow”) .. . Whenever 
you hear a radio announcer 
or an airline captain’s voice 
on any of the soaps, you can 
bet that the vote probably 
belongs to actaT Dick Terry, 
who also Is the lead-in an¬ 
nouncer for many soaps in¬ 
cluding “All My Children" 
"Search for Tomorrow/* 
“Love of Life,*’ and "One 
Life to Live." 

PLOT PORTENTS. De 
spite rebukes from her broth¬ 
er Snapper, Jill has her eye 
on the older, widowed Stuart, 
Mora’s friend on "The Young 
and the Restless." Still, 
Stuart seems to prefer Mom. 
The Leslie^Lucas marriage of 
convenience may have been 
an act of nobility by Lucas, 
but brother Lance and Leslie 
•re unable to hide their 
wounds. Nikki continues to 
show self-contempt and re¬ 
fuses to see young Scott. 

Will Julie’s shop make a go 
of it on “Days of Our Lives?" 
Doug worries about the 
money Involved and with 
good reason. Meanwhile, 
Julie keeps a jaundiced eye 
on Theresa whenever Doug’s 
around. Janice’s thoughts 
about real mothers and adop¬ 
tions truly distress Maggie 
With Timmy back safe and 
sound, David must find the 
right baby-sitter, and she’s 
obviously not Grandmother 
Julie. 

In a twist of fate, Frank’s 
own family may turn out to 
be his political downfall in 
"Ryan’s Hope." A joke which 
starts out innocently enough 
snowballs Into a major prob¬ 
lem. 



50 MPG 
HWY. 


39 MPG 
CITY 



MAZDA 6LC 

DELUXE HATCHBACK 

Loaded with 
itandard equipment 

59 payments $90.00 
1 Payment $113.06 
with $400 down paymont 
Interest 11.5% 

Prfco $4295 

s-ts 


paciPic 


ELLEN HOLLY and Al Freeman Jr. (left photo) have 
marital troubles as Ed and Carla Hall on "One Life to 
Live.” Megan Bagot (photo at right), a new face on 
“Search for Tomorrow,” plays Laine Adamson. 




GT 

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PAG! THK£i 




PREVUE 
PA YOFF 
PUZZLE 


THIS WEEK'S PRIZE IS $450.00 

ANSWER TO LAST WEEK S PUZZLE ON PAGE 2 


CONTEST 

RULES 


1. SoLe P»evje Pa,o« PuuW 

by Mt og m v* rr l& $ir,g term lo 

ra»» re wo'ds r « you best 

to m* clues To oo r>$ teaa eacn 
ciue ctfe\ji y 


2. Oec» Pe *arc i st it *«s « 
re correct answers plus some you 
wtii have 10 e * '•ate 

3 . YOo need n oi oe a sobscr Der to 
r>s newspaper m otoer to enter 
You may subm.t M many entries as 
you wish on the entry plan* pr.nied 
in P s newsoaper or e*act su-ed. 
c>ear. band o r awn fats*rrries o» me 
Df r nd entry D'a" » NO 
MECHANICALLY PRODUCED. 
PRINTED MIMEOGRAPHED etc 
cop-es of me entry feian* *<;: be ac 
cepted Each em»v must contain the 
comestanr* name address and 
phone number or it end not be ac¬ 
cepted. 

4. An^e is e 1 g bte to enter this 
contest eicept employees land 
members of the-r tam.i-esi of V'C- 
10' e Press Jjd. 

5. A e 

bear a postmark. The paper ,$ not 
responsbe for entries lost or 
delayed m the man. Entries for each 
wee* $ content not receded tor 
iudg<ng by 12 noon the foi'Cwmg 
(Wednesday are not etig bie 


6. TO Qua Ty ycu must wr ?e yOuf 
r swer to ore of me cues on me 
outsue of me envelope See 
coupon tor instructions 

7. Prevue will award me current 
pr<*e to f»e contestant who sends n 
an all correct solution tf more man 
one Mi tonect solution .s received 
the pri^e money will be shared 
equally it no all correct solution >s 
received ISO will be added to me 
following wee*- s poze. 

t. There is only one conee 
solution to each puzzle and only the 
correct answer can wm. The deci¬ 
sion ot the judges is final and ail 
contestants agree to abide by me 
ludges decision Ail entries become 
me property of P'Cvue Only one 
prize Will be awa'ded to a family un¬ 
it 

•.‘Everyone has the same 
opportunity to wm tor EVERY 
QUALIFIED ENTRY Will BE 
CHECKED and the winner an 
nounced No claiming is necessary 

10. Enmes must be muted to 
Prevue Payoff Puzzle. Victoria Press 
Ltd 0o* 300. Victoria BC V8W 
?N4 One entry per envelope 

11. Prevue reserves the right to 
correct any typographical errors 
which may appear during the puz 
/te game 


12. Pu.7* 
acrreviated and - . 
THE and A om-tteo. 


may te 

’ words as AN. 


PRRVUB PAYOFF PUZZLE is the Intriguing word puzzle game the whole family 
will enjoy and have an opportunity to win a big caeh award every week! 

THIS CROSSWORD is not a draw. It tests your knowledge of words end pays off 
for EVERY correct eolution. All you have to do Is complete each of the worde in a 
criss-cross format. Clues are provided ... even a work Net which hat aN the 
correct answers, plus some you'll have to eliminate. But there are no trick words 
or gueeeing . . . careful thought will make you a winner! So start and play today! 

PLEASE NOTE: EACH ENTRY MUST BE IN A SEPARATE ENVELOPE 


CLUES ACROSS 

5 You’d expect a practic¬ 
ing photographer to be 
able to recognize good —, 
of course. 

7 Though rapidly going 
bald, a man may be opti¬ 
mistic enough to hope to 
— his hair. 

8 Some, of course, are 
more cleverly construct¬ 
ed than others. 

13 You’d expect an old sail¬ 
or to — the ropes better 
than a raw hand 

14 Naturaly one could sym¬ 
pathize with a man hard 
hit by this. 

13 It has its tapering end, as 
a rule. 

17 A — guess Isn’t necessar¬ 
ily very accurate. 

18 Felines. 

18 Often too cold and damp 
for comfort. 

23 Something white that can 
hardly be other than icy 
cold! 

24 For good reason, may be 
carefully raised. 


CLUES DOWN 

1 Gladness, joy. 

2 It has a definite associa¬ 
tion with cooking. 

3 Neither present nor fu¬ 
ture. 

4 There’s room for dis¬ 
agreement as to the best 
way to treat a —. 

6 A firearm. 

9 Any artificial coloring 
used In this is quite 
harmless, of course. 

10 A man playing a — game 

is hardly apt to rush. 

11 There’s a limit to the 
amount of rough usage 
they will stand in wash¬ 
ing. 

12 In modern — generally, a 
critic may feel, too much 
slang tends to be used. 

16 Raised, in a sense 

20 Fresh information 

21 Container. 

22 The whole of 

a 


WORD LIST 


ALL .^FROCKS 
BAG ^GUN 
CATS HEATED 
CHEER HEAVED 
CHILD KNOT 
CHILL KNOW 
COOL LAD 
CROCKS LAWN 
DAWN LID 
DICTION NEWS 
FICTION 


PAST 

PHOTOGRAPHS 

PHOTOGRAPHY 

POOL 

RAIN 

REGAIN 

RETAIN 

RUIN 

SHIP 

SNOWBALL 


SNOWFALL 

SOAP 

SOUP 

STEAK 

STEAM 

TALES 

TALKS 

WHIP 

WILD 

WILY 





MAIL TO 

REVUE PAYOFF PUZZLE 
VICTORIA PRESS LTD 
NX 300 
VICTORIA. 1C. 

V8W2N4 


IMPORTANT 

TO QUALIFY WRITE YOUR 

Answer lo "12 DOWN" 

ON THF OUTSIDE OF 
YOUR ENVELOPE 


NAME 

A00RESS 


John Hearn's 
Collectibles 


My problem in preparing 
this column is to gauge ac¬ 
curately just what it is that 
readers would like to know 
I sometimes fed that It is all 
too elementary, but readers 
letters, Which continue to ar¬ 
rive in reassurlhg numbers, 
confirm that for eYery expert 
out there, there are a hun¬ 
dred others whosy interest is 
less than avid but far more 
than just avertge. It is to 
these that I address myself. 

Fpr example, Marion Bun- 
tirf^of Cumberland, B.C, 
asks how she can set about 
collecting Goss Heraldic, 
China — what are the pos 
sibie sources of supply? 

If there were any such 
thing as a Goss Heraldic 
China Supply Company I 
don't see that there would be 
any interest in collecting the 
stuff; there -is no thrill In 
tracking down an Item in a 
catalogue. The fun lies in 
knowing that wherever you 
go the object of your seaph 
may appear—church ba¬ 
zaars. flea markets, thrift 
stores, lawn sales—and, of 
course, antique stores every¬ 
where. 

Browsing through antique 
stores Is a joy any time but 
far more so if you know what 
you are looking for. The 
dealer always hopes you will 
buy something but he is very 
well aware of the importance 
of browsers. On the other 
hand I am convinced that too 
many potential buyers are in¬ 
timidated by dealers and re¬ 
luctant to show their igno¬ 
rance. They visualize 


horrendous coaversa lions 
that go something like this 

Customer (clutching a 
soiled $10 bill )—I wondered 
if you had any Goss Heraldic 
China ware. 

Dealer (ijiterposiag him 
self between the customer 
and the door)—By a happy 
stroke of good fortune I have 
recently acquired a Goss Cot¬ 
tage of un mpoachable au¬ 
thenticity—the Ledbury 
Feathers’ Hotel Extremely 
rare. A steal at SLIM. 

Intimidating but pure fan¬ 
tasy. Any good dealer will 
treat your $10 with the re¬ 
spect it deserves if only be¬ 
cause he wants you to come 
back again and again. 

What you should never, 
never do is to insult the 
dealer. Do not tell him his 
price is ridiculous. Do not tell 
him about the truckload of 
Goss Cottages with which 
your grandmother paved the 
driveway. Do not sneer at his 
goods and offer half his ask¬ 
ing price. If you want to dick 
er do so with a proper sense 
of delicacy. Rave about the 
item. Agree that it is rare and 
beautiful and in perfect con¬ 
dition and that you have jusi 
the spot for it—if only yen 
could afford it. Agree that his 
price is more reasonable but 
your budget is stalled at a 
level about 18% below his 
minimum. Express polite re¬ 
grets—then see If he lets you 
leave the store. 

Readers letters should be 
addressed to Collector’s 
Item, R.R. 1. Lowbankv On¬ 
tario. N0.A 1K0 



*“’/. 

No mastered letter* »r letters without the retired it emu 
poMjcr will bf act rpted tar judging la t 


John Denver 
Tours Alaska 

John Denver serves as 
guide for a two-hour look 
at our 49th state and its 
people on “Alaska: The 
American Child," an ABC 
Sports special wilderness 
adventure film, airing 
Sunday, Sept. 3 at 7 p.m. 
on the ABC Television 
Network. The singer-en¬ 
tertainer explores Ameri¬ 
ca’s last great wilderness 
frontier, and performs 
three songs composed 
especially for the film. 



BATHROOM 

RENOVATIONS 

Complete range of 
bathroom 

FIXTURES 

and 

ACCESSORIES 


Tues. to Sat. 
9:30 to 5 

1003 VIEW 380-0232 


9 





















































PAGE rout 

. =4-* 


Saturday, September 2 


CBC ® 

CBUFT® 

KOMO (D 

KING ® 

CHEK ® 

KIRO CD* 

TIME 

CHAN ® 

KCTS ® 

KSTW © 

KVOS © 

CKVU© 



Superfriends 

Globetrotters 

Wrestling 

Stooges 

i go 

McGowan 

Mr Rogers 

Forum 

Star Trek 

Scooby s 



Scooby s 

continued 

continued 

Bugs 

• 10 

Pete's Piece 

Electric Co 

continued 

King Kong 

continued 

Sesame Street 

Roquet 

continued 

continued 

OnKamera 

Bunny 

9 M 

On Kamei 

Classic 

Speakout 

Gooiies 

continued 

continued 

Heidi 

continued 

Pink Penther 

Jerry 

Road 

9 M 

Let »Go 

Rebop 

Decuman tar y 

Dastardly 

continued 

Dot Door 

Wick* 

continued 

Pants 

Faiweil 

rfunner 

io to 

George 

Sesame 

Formby 

Runner 

Robin 

Hobbi edehoy 

Mini-Fee 

Krofft 

Sentinels 

Golden vears 

Batman 

IS JO 

Kidstuff 

Street 

Racers 

Perils 

Hood 

Adventure 

Baseball 

Super show 

Baseball 

Show BiZ 

Tarzan 

lit* 

continued 

Tennis % 

Krofft 

Chan 

Huntloy St. 

Quiz Kids 

a suivre 

American 

continued 

McGowan 

Isis 

»t >3b 

Red F ishar 

Cooking 

Racing 

Isis 

continued 

Saturday 

j suivre 

Bandstand 

continued 

News 

Fat Albert 

11*99 

Hollywood! 

Gardening 

Movie 

Fat Albert 

continued 

Sports 

a suivre 

F-Troop 

continued 

Travel 

Space 

U: 39 

Discover 

Turnabout 

continued 

Space 

Sports 

continued 

• suivre 

Paul IV 

continued 

Saturday 

US. 

1:99 

Film 

Consumer 

continued 

Outlook 

continued 

continued 

a suivre 

Action 

continued 

Sports 

Open 

1:34 

continued 

French Chef 

continued 

Perspective 

continued 

■affections 

Baoafeiie 

Movie. 

Baseball 

continued 

Tennis 

i t ee 

War 

victory Garden 

Movie 

799 Club 

continued 

Mr. Chips 

a suivre 

Adventure 

Challenge 

continued 

continued 

1:1# 

Vears 

Health 

continued 

continued 

continued 

Space: me 

Tunisia 

continued 

Sidelines 

Space tttt 

continued 

3:4# 

Wrestling 

Oil Painting 

continued 

continued 

Lively Woman 

continued 

Gesperd 

continued 

Movie 

continued 

continued 

3:30 

continued 

Book Beet 

Cartoons 

Wacky Races 

Party Gama 

Lassie 

Fiers % 

NFL Groats 

Comedy 

Red F isher 

continued 

4 00 

Wide 

Firing Line 

Bottom of 

Funorems 

Oceans Alive 

B.C. Futurity 

Guerners 

Wide 

continued 

Lime 

continued 

4:30 

World 

continued 

the Sea 

Our Gang 

Robin Hood 

World , 

Her os 

World 

Adventure 

House 

continued 

3.00 

of 

Evening 

Twilight 

Monkees 

continued 

of Survtvel 

a suivre 

ef Sports 

News 

continued 

HemWctoniar 

5:30 

Sports 

at Pops 

Zona 

Ruff House 

Lively Spec ai! 







EVE. 






News * - 

Journal 

College 

News 

continued 

News 


News 

French Chef 

Star 

Weekend 

Behind Scene 

Escape 

Sur le Monde 

Football 

Animals 

News 

continued 

4 00 

4 39 

Show B* 

Classic 

Trek 

continued 

Friends 

Muppets 

Uni vers 

continued 

Wild Kingdom 

Charlie s 

Comedy 

7:00 

Bionic 

Hometown 

Hat Haw 

Gong Show 

TBA 

Two Ronnies 

Inconnus 

continued 

Gong Show 

Angels 

In Search of 

7 30 

Women 

Almanac 

continued 

Movie 

TBA 

- 

Super spec tel 

Les Amis 

continued 

Baseball 

Super special 

BobNewhart 

0 00 

New Avengers 

Damien, 

M. Robbins 

continued 

Love Boat 

continued 

Festival 

continued 

continued 

continued 

M T Moore 

• 30 

continued 

Drama 

Pop Goes 

continued 

continued 

Movie 

du Cinema 

Lawrence 

continued 

Movie 

Mo v.a 

* 00 

Movie 

continued 

Nashville 

continued - 

Kotter 

continued 

Canadienne 

Walk 

continued 

continued 

continued 

9 30 

continued 

Belle 

Country Mu>ic 

Movie 

Maude 

continued 

a suivre 

Love 

Americans 

continued 

continued 

>0 00 

continued 

of 

Movie 

continued 

Lively Specials 

continued 

Sports 

Boat 

continued 

continued 

continued 

10 30 

continued t 

Amherst 

continued 

continued 

Vic Frenklyn 

News 

Cinema (11:19) 

News 

News 

News 

Movie (11.25) 

n.oo 

News 

Two Ronnies 

continued 

continued 

Sports 

Movie fit 40) 

a suivre 

Movie (11 45) 

Saturday 

Moviem.tS) 

continued 

1)30 

continued . 

continued 

continued 

continued 

Page 

continued 

Cine-Nutt 

continued 

Night 

continued 

continued 

1? 00 

Movie (17 10) 

continued 

continued 

Movie M7 10) 

Movie 

continued 

asuivre i 

continued > 

’ Live 

continued 

continued 

17 30 

continued 


News 

continued 

continued 

Movie 

a suivre 

continued 

Movie 

Movie (1:15) 

Tennis 


continued 



continued 

continued 

(1:49) 

a suivre 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 


continued 



700 C'ub 

Movie 




v a* *&*: 


Spotlight on Movies 


Fardnfr*, •* II at no**. 

Comedy, spoof of the wild 
west starring Jerry Lewis 
(!««). 

Prince Valiant, •*» 4 1 2 g.m. 

Colorful action comic strip 
about the King Arthur era. 
James Mason, Janet Leigh 
and Robert Wagner (1954). 

The Mightly Jnagle. an II 

at Z p.m. Adventure about 
two exploreres, with Mar¬ 
shall Thompson heading for 
the Congo and Dave Da Lie 
for the Amazon (1963) 

The DeviTi Dftseipk. ea S t 
339 p.m. Comedy set during 
the American Revolution, 


starring Laurence Olivier, 
Burt Lancaster, Kirk Doug¬ 
las and Janette Scott. An en¬ 
tertaining screen translation 
of a George Bernard Shaw 
work (1959). 


life revolves around story- 
filled Sunday jaunts with his 
grandfather, (Yossie Yadin), 
a junk collector in east end 
Xlontreal. 


Gentle Giant, ea 12 at 7:39 
p.m. Drama about a boy's 
friendship with a bear cub. 
Dennis Weaver. Vera Miles 
and Ralph Meeker (1968). 


Lies My Father Told Me, 
an 2 and C nt f p.m. Tragic 
tale of a Jewish family in 
conflict, set in Montreal dur¬ 
ing the 1926s. Jeff Lynas stars 
as David, a young boy whose 


The Life and Times of 
Judge Key Bean, on 7 at 9 

p.m. Western with Paul New¬ 
man as the hanging judge 
who brought frontier justice 
to a Texas town during the 
1890s. Others in the cast are 
Victoria Principal, Ned 
Beatty and Roddy McDowall 
(1972). 

The New Maverick, on 8 at 

9 p.m. It’s a return for James 
Gamer and Jack Kelly to 
their 1959 series roles, also 
starring Charles Frank as 
their kin Ben Maverick, an 
Ivy League dropout Made 
for television in 1978. 


GAVIN MacLEOD, star of The Love Boat, Is momentarily 
out of his captain's etniform, but he will soon again man the 
bridge of the Pacific Princess as the show sails into Us 
second full season on the network this fall. 


Soiemon and Sheba, an 12 

nt 9:39 p.m. Drama with Yul 
Brynner as the humane king 
of Israel and Gina Lollobrigi- 
da as the seductive queen 
sent from Egypt to destroy 
him. Others in the cast are 
George Sanders, Marisa 
Pavan and David Farrar 
(1959). 

The Geatest Show on 
Earth, on 11 at 19 p.m. Cecil 
B. DeMille s Oscar winner, a 
spectacular circus melodra 
ma starring Betty Hutton, 


Cornel Wilde and Charlton 
Heston (1952). 

Von Ryan's Express, ea 7 
at 11:25 p.m. Second World 
War drama starring Frank 
Sinatra as a USAF colonel at 
an Italian PoW camp Others 
in the cast are Trevor 
Howard and Raffaella Carra 
(1965) 

A Connecticut Yankee In 
King Arthur's Court, on 2 at 
11:49 p.m. An entertaining 
version of Mark Twain’s 
classic about a blacksmith 
transported to another age. 
Bing Crosby and Rhonda 
Fleming (1949). 

The Roots ef Heaven, en 4 t 
11:45 p.m. Drama with a 
message—seeking the 
preservation of Africa’s ele¬ 
phants. Trevor Howard, 
Errol Flynn, Eddie Albert, 
Orson Welles and Jullictte 
Greco (1958) 

Boccaccio *74, on 13 at mid 
night. Italian made comedy 
made up of three naughty 
tales—The Temptation of Dr. 
Antonio. The Raffle and The 
Job. Good performances by 
Sophia Loren. Enita Ekbert 
and Romy Schneider, and 
fine direction by Fellini, Vi¬ 
sconti and De Sica. Dubbed i 
English (1962) 

Cinderella Liberty, on 8 at 


12:19 a.m. An adult love story 
about the bitter-sweet rela 
tionship between a sailor and 
a cynical prostitute. The best 
thing about this film are the 
performances by James 
Caan and Marsha Mason 
(1973). 

Adventure, on 12 at 12:19 
a.n. Drama about the ro¬ 
mance between a seaman, 
played by Clark Gable; and a 
librarian, played by Greer 
Garson (1945). 

The Bess, on S at 1 a.m. 

Drama, a realistic profile of a 
corrupt politicians's rise to 
power in a Midwestern city. 
John Payne, William Bishop 
and Gloria McGhee (1956) 

21 Hours at Munich, on 6 at 
1:15 a.m. Drama, for details 
see Sunday's listing on C'han 
nel 8 at 12:10 a.m. 


Today's 

Highlights 


Saturday Sports, on 2 and f 
at 1 p.m. The Canadian 
Water-Ski Championships 
taped at Hull, Quebec. 

B.C. Futurity, on 2 at 4:39 
p.m. The Jack Diamond fu¬ 
turity Stakes, telecast from 
Vancouver's Exhibition 
Park. 


Superspecial, on 2 and < at 

8 p.m. A Soiree Canadienne. 
performance by a troupe of 
Quebec's finest entertainers 
at the Olympia Theatre for 
an enthusiastic Parisian au 
dience. 




Behind the Mask, on 2 at 
1:49 a.m. British-made 
drama about a senior sur 
geon at a London hospital, 
who fights obstacles to main 
tain bis principles. Fine per 
formances by Michael Red 
grave and Tony Britton 
(1958). 

Savage Gringo, on « nt 3:15 
a.m. Italian-made western 
about a stagecoach which 
heads for San Francisco. Ken 
dark (1965). 


Cable 10 
Program 


SATURDAY, SEPT. 2 


1:30 p.m. Yoquat. 

2 p.m. Music of Randy 

Rain. 

2:30 p.m. Urban Report. 

3 p.m. Cable Ten Sports: 
Cricket. , 

5:30 p.m. Here's I^owlher. 




CABLE 


Did you know? 


You can see Victoria City Council and Saanich 
Municipal Council Committee meetings on Cable 
10? Please consult this television listing for times 
and days. 

On Wednesday, Sept. 6th at 7:30 p.m., you can 
see the Aug 31st Committee A” meeting for 
Victoria. 


VICTORIA 


— CABLE 10 IS A SERVICE OF VICTORIA CABLEVISION LTD. — 



esc C 


John Paul 
Lesste 


Piaca 


Parade 

Across Cam 
continued 

Wild kmgd 


Sunday Spot 
continued 
continued 
continued 


Access 

Hymn Sinf 


World 
Of Disney 
Beachcomb 
Rhode 


Kensington 
All In Fami 
continued 
The 


Wolf 

conti nued 


Movie (tin 


continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 


Bride of th 
at noon. Thri 
gle plantati 
murder and 
bara Payton 
Burr (1951). 

Adventure 
on 4 at I p.i 

movie with 
giving a fine 
the famous A 
Samuel L. Cl 
the many ac 
in this film a 
Donald Cris| 
(19(4). 

Spooks Ru 

1:39 p.m. C 
sinister man: 
tain camp 
leged c haldrc 


MORE TH 

and the Ui 
Lewis La! 
trophy this 
Sunday, S 
viewers oi 
on Chanoe 

















































■ 


A 


Sunday, September 3 


PAG I FfVf 


CBC (3) 

cbuftCB 

KOMO ® 

KING (£ 

CHEK ® 

KIRO ® 

TIME 

CHAN ® 

KCTS ® 

KSTW ID 

k vos 42 

CKVU® 

High Man 

Pop* 

Roquet 

Guignol 

i might 

Ag U S A 

Vision On 
continued 

Journeys 

Gardening 

Sideline* 

Soup 

Humberd 

continued 

Discovery 

Terry Winters 

Discovery 

Roberts 

Face Nation 
NFL Today 

IN 
IN 
t 00 
♦ 39 

continued 
continued 1 

Good News 

Street 

continued 

continued 

Life 

Good News * 
Humberd 

Swagger* 

Anchor 

Robert 

Peg# 

Friends 

Spidermen 

John Paul 

LOIIIO 

Mooting 

Football 
a tuivre 
a tul vre 

Boomerang 

jobberies 

Grape Ape 

Hot Fudge 

Star Trtk 

Baseball 

continued 

Oral Roberts 

Search 

Written 

TBA 

NFL 

Football 

continued 

continued 

it aa 

11: It 
ll:N 
11:30 

Orel Roberts 

Discovery 

It I* Written 
Crossroads 

continued 

continued 
continued • 

continued 

Robert 

Schuller 

Calvary 

Perspective 

Ernest Angiey 
continued 

Vie Frankly* 
Whet Next? 
Perty Geme 

Porad* 

Acroii Canada 
continued 

Wild Kingdom 

D'hier 

A Domain 
Rencoutret 

Magazine 

ittues 

Direction* 

Movie 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

NFL 

Garden 

Better Way 

Mule to see 
Country 

continued 

continued 

US. 

Open 

11:99 

12:19 

IN 

IN 

Film 

A Better Way 

Terry Winters 

Star Trek 

In Search 

Tut*» Egypt 

Wash Week 

Wall Street 

Movie 

continued 

continued 

Movie 

Jerry 

Folweft 

Faith 

PTL 

Oceans Altve 

Vk Frankly* 
wild Life 
Editors 

Sunday Sport* 
continued 
continued 
continued 

Rencontrea 

Magazine 

Semeine 

Vert# 

continued 

continued 

continued 

Golf 

Football 

continued 

continued 

continued 

Adam-12 

Movie 

continued 

continued 

Tennis 

continued 

continued 

continued 

IN 

2:19 

3:99 

2:10 

continued 

Movie 

continued 

continued 

Challenge 

continued 

Great 

Performance 

continued 

continued 

Movie 

continued 

Club 

continued 

continued 

Goodies 

Sport* 

continued 

ACCOM 

Hymn Sing 

Newt 

Be Jour 

Ou Seigneur 
Second 

continued 

continued 

Alia* Smith 

Explorers 

Great Ganna 

Meet Press 

Wilderness 

Hymn Sing 

Lucy Show 
Forum 

Racing Favar 

Camedy 

National 

4:M 

4:30 

S:0« 

S:M 

Koehler 

Questions 

Smile 

Comment 

continued 

Wilder 

Perspective 

Pro 

continued 

continued 

Voyage 

continued 

Funoreme 

Our Gang 

Movie 

continued 

continued 

Whet Next? 

World 

Of Disney 
Beachcomber 

Hebdo 

Actual itei 

La Tempi 

New* 

All-Star 

Alaska 

continued 

Jack Patera 
Castaway 

World of 

Disney 

News 

continued 

Beachcombers 

Rhode 

Disasters 

Horowitz 

60 

Minutos 

EVE. 

4 00 - 
6:30 

7:00 

7;39' 

News 

continued 

Nancy 

Drew 

Harry S 

Trumev\’ 

continued 

Star 

Trtk 

Jarry 

Lewis 

Have Gun 

60 

Minutes 

Debate 

Quiz 

Terry 

Kensington 

All in Family 
continued 

Thn 

Dimanchet 

A tuivre 

A tuivre 

continued 

continued 

Movie 

Project 

UPO 

Police 

Story 

Kensington 

All in Family 
continued 

The 

Rhode 

All In Family 

continued 

Alice 

IN 

1:39 

0:09 

t:3t 

Project 

UFO 

Godfather 

Sega 

Evening 

at Pops 

Mayor of 

Caster bridge 

Telethon . 

continued 

continued 

continued 

Movie 

Documentary 

Movie 

continued 

Lewis 

Telethon 

continued 

continued 

1 i uf 

Wolf 

continued 

Newt - 
Movie (tl 40; 

A tuivre 

Sports 

Cine-Club: 
a tuivre 

continued 

continued 

New* 

Weekend 

continued 

continued 

Newt 

Movie 

Wolf 

continued 

News 

Movie <11 45) 

Switch 

continued 

Newt 

Movie 

19:99 

10:30 

11:90 

11:39 

continued 

News 

continued« 

Wodehouse 

Wodehouse 

World War 1 

continued 
continued 
continued 
continued v 

continued 

continued 

Movie 

continued 

continued 

continued 

(tnfinutd 

continued 

continued 

continued 

a tuivre 
a tuivre 
e tuivre 

Movie Hl;43) 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

1299 

12 31 

Movie (12 10; 

continued 

continued 


continued 

continued 

continued •* ; 

continued 

continued 


Spotlight on Movies 


Bride of the Gorilla, on II 

at boub. Thriller set on a jun¬ 
gle plantation, about love 
murder and jealousy. Bar 
bara Payton and Raymond 
Burr (1961). 

Adventures of Mari Twain, 
on 4 at I p.m. Biographical 
movie with Fredric March 
giving a fine performance as 
the famous American writer, 
Samuel L. Clemence Among 
the many actors taking part 
in this film are Alexis Smith, 
Donald Crisp and Alan Hale 
(1944). 

Spooks Run Wild, on 11 at 
1:39 p.m. Comedy about a 
sinister mansion and a moun 
tain camp for underprivi¬ 
leged children (1941). 


Codaight, My Love, on C 
and 8 at 2:3 p.a. Comedy 
drama, a takeoff on private- 
eye films. The story is about 
two detectives hired to find a 
missing fiance. Richard 
Boone and Michael Dunn 
Made for television in 1973^ 

The Geisha Boy. on II at 3 
p.m. Comedy about a magi 
cian on a USO tour of Japan, 
and a small orphaned boy 
(1958). 

Tarzan and the Lost Safari, 
on 12 at 5 p.m. British made 
adventure about a million¬ 
aire playboy and his wedding 
guests who crash-land in the 
jungle. Gordon Scott and Yo- 
kande Dolan (1956) 



In Search of Ancient Mys¬ 
teries, on 12 at 8 p.m. Docu 
mentary made for television 
about the possibility of pre 
historic visitors from outer 
space. Narrated by Rod Sort¬ 
ing (1974). 

The New Maverick, on 4 at 
9 p.m. Western, for details 
see Saturday’s listing on 
Channel 8 at 9 p.m. 

Perfect Friday, on 12 at 9 
p.m. British-made comedy 
with an adult story about an 
unlikely trio who stage a 
bank caper in London. Ursula 
Andress, Stanley Baker, 
David Warner and Patience 
Collier (1970). 

Another Thin Man, on 12 at 
II p.m. Mystery about a cou 

pie who become involved in 
three murders at a Long Is¬ 
land estate. William Powell, 
Myrna Loy and Virginia Grey 
(1939). 


A Man and a Woman, on 5 
nt 11:39 p.m. French made 
drama with an Oscar win¬ 
ning story about a widow and 
a racing driver. A visually 
stunnig. superbly acted, and 
ultimately very moving con¬ 
temporary love story. Anouk 
Aimee and Jean-Louis Trin- 
tignant (1966) 

The Last Survivors, on 5 at 
11:39 p.m. Drama made for 
television about the occu¬ 
pants in an overcrowded life¬ 
boat. Martin Sheen. Diane 
Baker, Tom Bosley and 
Christopher George. The 
story was based on facts 
(1975). 

Our Man la Havana, a 2 at 

11:49 p.m Comedy spy thrill 
er from the screenplay by 
Graham Greene, and star 
ring Alec Guiness, Maureen 
O’Hara, Burl Ives and Ernie 
Kovacs (i960) 


Today's Highlights 


Follow the Fleet, on 4 at 
11:45 p.m. Musical with a 
story about sailors and girls, 
highlighted by great Irving 
Berlin songs and perfor¬ 
mances by Fred Astaire and 
Ginger Rogers (1936). 

Cinderella Liberty, on « at 

11:45 p.m. Comedy drama, 
for details see Saturday’s 


Cable 10 
Program 

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 3 
1 p.m. Sports Special. 

4:39 p.m. Homegrown 

Music. 

5 p m Arts Calendar 
5:30 p.m. Here’s Lowther. 
5:35 p m. New Games Tour¬ 
nament 

✓ 


listing on channel t at 11:tO 
am. 

21 Honrs at Munich, on It' 
12:10 a.m. Drama mado for 
television based on the Arab 
terrorist raid at the 1972 
Olympics in Munich. William 
Holden and Franco Nero 
(1876). 

Sword of Sherwood Forex 

•n 7 nt 1:15 a.m. British ma* 
adventure with Richard 
Greene as Robin Hned 


NOW £ 
OHN §?• 

NEVER WAX 

VOW CM MUM 


Com** to Victoria 

MBhH JO-7571 

y-u 


MORE THAN 100 million people in all parts of Canada 
and the United States will watch the 13th annual Jerry 
liewis Labor Day Telethon Against Muscular Dys¬ 
trophy this year The 21»4-hour telethon — from 7 p.m. 
Sunday, Sept. J, will be seen by British Columbia 
viewers over CKVU-TV in Vancouver. Channel 13, and 
on Channel 7. 


Parade—Children, on 2 al 9 
a.m. Repeats of three series 
for preschoolers: The Friend¬ 
ly Giant: Bonjour, Bonjour 
and Mr. Dress up 

Don’t Forget to Smile, on 8 
at 5 p.m. A report from the 
Toronto* Hospital for Sick 
Children The topic is bum 
therapy. 

Alaska: Tbo American 
Child, on 4 at 7 p.m. Docu 
mentary with John Denver 
exploring America*! last 
frontier—Alaska 

Jerry Lewis Telethon, on II 
at 7 p.m. (and also on Chan 

ael 13 starting at TM pm.).A 
21 hour show in which cele 
brilies appeal for funds to 


fight muscular dystrophy. 
This it Jerry Lewis’ 13th, 
taped annual campaign. 

Mayor of Caslerbridge. on 
9 at 9 p.m. A seven-part se¬ 
ries adapted from the novel 
by Thomas Hardy. The story 
is about the rise and fall of a 
self-made man. Starring 
Alan Bates. 

CTV Inquiry, on I at 19 
p.m. Green Salad May Hurt 
You’, a report on toxins in tho 
food cycle. The program 
blames farmers who spray 
excessively, and the federal 
government—for not inform¬ 
ing the public of the potential 
dangers and for promoting 
the use of pesticide 


WIFE SAVER KITCHEN NOOKS 



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Alto a compel* uphotfring **rWc*. *0 

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< 


Monday, September 4 


CBC ® 

CBUFT® 

KOMO ® 

KING ® 

CHEK ® 

KIRO ® 

TIME 

CHAN ® 

KCTS ® 

KSTW © 

KVOS IQl 

CKVU© 

In Touch 
continued 

• • 

Good Morning 
America (7 am.) 
Cross-Wits 
Boomerang 

Taday 

continued 

Seattle 

Today 

Canada A M. 

continued 

Daybreak 

Joyce Davidson 

News 

continued 

Phil 

Donahue 

IN 

1 30 
t 00 

• 30 

Canada 

continued 

Cooking 

Joyce Davidson 


Telethon 

continued 

continued 

continued 

Frolics 

continued 

Phil 

Donahue 

Telethon 

continued 

continued 

continued 

Friendly Giant 

Mr Drtssup 
Sesame 

Street 

Mouvement 

Reflets 

Run Pays 
Chiboukis 

Happy Days 
Pyramid 

Family Faud 

Ryan s Hope 

Rollers 

Fortune 

America 

Alive 

Giant 

Mr. Dressup 
Barton 
and Co. 

AH In Family 

Love of Lifa 
Young 

Saarch 

10 00 

10 30 
11:00 
11:30 

Tracy 

Definition 

Yoaa 

Your Move 


continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

Van Dyke 

Love of Life 
Medical 

Center 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

Summer 

Search 

cfl 

Football 

Mag Express 

A comm. 

Animagone 

Maboule 

All My 

Children 

One Ufa 

To Live 

Squares 

Days of 

Our Lives 

Doctors 

Film 

continued 

CFL 

Football 

U S Open 
Tennis 
continued 
continued 

11:00 

13 30 

1 00 
1:30 

Adam-12 

Movia 

continued 

continued 


continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

Price 

Is Right 

All in Family 

Doc in House 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

Secretdes 

Tresous 

CeSoir 

Maveis 

General 

Hospital 

Edga of Night 
Marv 

Another 

World 

Movie 

continued 

continued 
continued 
continued 
, continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

3:06 

3:30 

3 00 
!:M 

Another 

World 

Alan 

Hamel 


continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

Honemooners 

Hillbillies 

Giliigan 

Jeannie 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

Bob 

MeLoan 

Edga of Night 

Roulettes 

C lenience 
Football 

Griffin 

News 

continued 

continued 

Newlyweds 

News 

Sanford 

Flippar 

Doris Day 

News 

continued 

continued 

continued 

4:00 
4:J« 
i 00 
t:M 

Lucy Show 

Gong Show 

CFL , 

Football 

Sesame 

Street 

Mr Rogers 

Electric Co. 

Superstars 

Beaver 

American 

Futurity 

Movie 

continued 

continued 

continued 

Rascals 

Partridgas 

Petticoat 

Squares 







EVE. 






Hourglass 

continued 

M.T Moore 

Take30 

jilt 

News 

News 

NFL 

Football 

News 

continued 

Seattle 

Squares 

continued 

Little 

House 

M T Moore 

Tall Truth 
Around Here 

*:M 

IN 

7:00 

7:30 

continued 
continued 
continued „ 
continued 

Zoom 

Over Easy 

MacNail 

News work) 

Brady Bunch 

My 3 Sons 

Hogan 

Adam-12 

Andy Griffith 

Gong Show 

Joker's Wild 

Doc in House 

Carol Burnett 

Bob Newheert 

Vancouver 

continued 

Happy Days 

Si mar d 

M-A-S-H 

Three's Company 

Daniel 

Boone 
cinema 
a sufvre 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

Uttle 

Mouse On 

The Prairie 
continued 

Happy Days 

Rene Simard 
M-A-S-H 

Three's Company 

Jefferson* 

continued 

continued 

M-A-S-H 

1:00 

0:30 

*00 

*30 

Bobby Vinton 

Hunters 

Movie 

continued 

Leonarc 

Bemstem 

Ballet 

continued 

Movie 

continued 
continued ^ 
continued 

Newlywfds 

Merv 

Griffin 

continued 

continued 

continued 

Eddie Capra 
Mysteries 

Tanker Bomb 
continued 

Nows 

Onedin Line (11:401 

asurvre 

Sports 

Mol lore 
asuivre 

Shirley 

Bassey 

Movie 

Quincy 

continued 

News 

Johnny 

Tankar Bomb 

continued 

News 

Lou 

Grant 

Movie (11 45) 

10 00 

10:30 

11 00 

11:30 

continued 

continued 

News 

continued 

Union 

Maids 

Dick Covett 

Lowell 

News 

Love Experts 

Odd Couple 

Love 

Caught! 

Documentary 

Love Experts 
Movie (11 45) 

continued 

continued 

Sports 

Page 

continued 

continued 

Fain 

Divers 

continued 

continued 

continued 

Carson 

continued 

Tomorrow 

Movie (17:10) 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

13:00 

13:30 

Movie (13 10) 

continued 

continued 

Thornes 

TOO Club 

News 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

Movie 

continued 

continued 

Groueho 



Spotlight on Movies 


• VI 




m 



Treasure Island, on 8 at 
12;39 p m Japanese made 
cartoon, at>out the adven 
tures of a boy and a girl 
competing with pirates to lo 
cate a hidden treasure 
(1970) 

Fork Chop Hill, on S at 3 
p.m. Stark war drama, about 
the last hours of the Korean 
War, well directed by Lewis 
Milestone. Gregory Peck has 
an excellent supporting cast 
which includes George Pep 

K rd, Harry Guardino and 
pTorn (1959) 

Pippi on the Run, on 12 at 4 

p.m, Swedish made adven 
ture about the escapades of 
Pippi Longstocking and her 
friends when they run away 
from home. Inger Nilsson 
plays Pippi. Made for televi¬ 
sion in 1979. 

Where Love Has Gone, on 

11 at 8 p.m. Drama based on 
the novel by Harold Robbins, 
about a 15-year-old girl who 
kills her mother’s lover. Fine 
acting by Susan Howard, 
Betty Davis ad Michael Con 
nors (1964). 

Fuzz, on 8 at 9 p.m. Com 
edy-drama about big-city po 
Uce operations. Boston I oca 
lions, starring Burt 
Reynolds, Raquel Welch, Yul 
Brynner and Jack Weston 
(1972) 


The Resurrection of Za 
chary Wheeler, on 4 at 11:39 
p.m. Drama about a car 
crash victim rehabilitated at 
a mysterious clinic in New 
Mexico. Leslie Nielsen, 
Bradford Dillman and Angie 
Dickinson (1971). 


Kelly's Heroes, on 7 and 12 
at 11:45 p.m. Adventure about 
a group of American soldiers 
during the Second World 
War, who penetrate enemy 
lines to take a fortune in gold 
from a French bank. The 
leaders of the group are Clint. 
Eastwood and Telly Savalas 
(1970). 


directors and covert drug 
trafficking Bill Fraser and 
Raymond Huntley (1973). 

The Man from the Diner's 
Club, on 7 at 2:35 a.m. Com 
edy with Danny Kaye as a 
timid clerk in a Diner's Club, 
who issues a credit card to a 
gangster. Also in the cast is 
Cara Williams (1963). 


Today's 

Highlights 


The Next Voice Yon See, on 
13 at midnight. British made 
mystery about a blind pianist 
who recognizes the voice of 
the man responsible for the 
loss of his sight. Bradford 
Dillman and Catherine 
Schell. Made for television in 
1975. 


In Performance at Wolf 
Trap, on 9 at 9 p.m. Ballet 
starring Mikhail Baryshni¬ 
kov. 


Carry On Loving, on C at 
12:19 a.m. British made com 
edy about the misadventures 
of a group of marriage- 
agency clients. Sidney James 
and Kenneth Williams. 
(1970) 

Hurt’s Your Funeral, on 8 
at 12:19 a.m. British made 
comedy about rival funeral 


Eddie Capra Mysteries,on 
13 at 9 p.m. Debut: Vincent 
Baggetta plays lawyer Eddie 
Capra who tries to catch the 
culprit in this new series. 

Tankerbomh, on 2 and f at 

19 p.m. A report in which a 
claim is made that the law of 
probability makes a major oil 
spill off the Canadjan coast 
inevitable. David Suzuki is 
the host. 




Three Union Maids 


Cable 10 
Program 


BEET JONES (No. 7t, who quarter 
hacked the Baltimore Colts to three 
AFC East titles ifi the last three years, 
will be handing off to running backs like 
Roosevelt Leaks (No. 48) against the 
Super Bowl Champion Dallas Cowboys 
when “ABCs NFL Monday Night Foot¬ 


ball” premieres for the 1978 season on 
Labor Day Sept. 4 at 7 p.m. In the 
broadcast booth for the ninth year of 
“ABC’s NFL Monday Night Football” 
will be Frank Gifford, Howard Cosell 
and Don Meredith. 


Union Maids, a nickname given to women who put their 
blood and faith in the labor union movement of the 30's, 
reflects on the working persons's struggle through the eyes 
of Sylvia, Kate and Stella, three women whotbecame active 
members of the Chicago rank and file labor emergence. The 
documentary will air Monday. Sept. 4, at 10 p.m. on Channel 
9 

In this legacy. Sylvia, Kate and Stella recall their child¬ 
hood and their first jobs in Chicago — jobs in a laundry, 
garment factory and the stockyards, working 14-hours a 
day tasks that paid less to women and Blacks. 


MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 4 

6 p m. Here’s Lowther 

6 30 p m. Vic West Happen 
ings. 

7 p.m. Urban Report 

7:30 p.m. Fire Alert. 8:30 
p.m Money Talk 

9 p m. Sports Special: Soc¬ 
cer. 




esc (3) 


in-Touch 

continued 


Giant 
Mr. Dreatun 


Edge of Night 
High Hapat 
Taka SC 


OmSummsr 

CFL 


Hourglass 
M.T MOOfl 
Variety '79 
Cooks 


TiA 

Ryan • Fancy 


11(11:401 


THE CHAINS 
America snap 
sion Network | 
12-hour dram; 
eludes Edwan 
Its stars, beg 
channels 4 anc 


THl 

















































/ 


Tuesday, September 5 


PAGf Sf VCN 


- - — - / ¥ 






-:n 

CBC (2) 

CBUFT® 

KOMO ® 

KING ® 

CHEK ® 

KIRO ® 

TIME 

CHAN ® 

KCTS ® 

KSTW (O 

KVOS (B> 

ckvuO 

1»-Touch 


Good Morning 
Amor lea (7 a. m.l 
Cross-Wits 
Traatiousa 

Today 

continuad 

Soattia 

Today 

Canada A.M. 

continued 

Daybreak 

Joyce Davidson 

Nows 

continued 

Phil 

Donahue 

• :44 
IN 

• 44 
IN 

continued 

Cooking 

Joyce Davidson 


Zoo Revue 

Comedy 

Price 

continuad 

Phil 

Donahue 

vy- r>wtem 

Huntley St 
continued 
continued 

Crf jvl;—- 

Giant 

Mr. Drmsup 

Sesame 

Mouvemenf 

Pierrot 

Mag-Eiprnt 

Happy Days 
Pyramid 

Family Faud 
Ryan's Hopa 

Roliars 

Fortuna 

A mar tea 

Allvt 

Giant 

Mr. Dr essup 
Barton. 

Company 

Ail In Family 

Lovaof Lift 

Yourng 

Saarch 

to m 
to M 

11:44 

11:10 

Tracy 

Definition 

Yoga 

Your Move 


is Right 

Mika 

Douglas 

continuad 

V9fi 

Lovaof Ufa 
Medical 

Canter 

co niton 

Young 

Family Fei d 
Ryan's Hop* 

Summsr 

Saarch 

Boa 

McLaaa 

OndeBlll 

roulattat 

Ctamanca 

Rat tots 

All My 

Children 

On# Ufa 

ToUva 

Squaras 

Oaysof 

Our Livas 
Doctors 

Nows. Ida 

Clarkson 
Sanford. Son 

News 

As the 

World Turns 
Guiding 

12.00 

12 W 

100 

1 : J* 

News 

Movie 

continuad 


Jeennie 

Movie 

continuad 

Price 

Is Right 

All In Family 

Doc In House 

Aft 9y 

Chlldran 

Vancouver 

Hanlon 

Edgt of NigM 
High Hopes 

Taka 30 

D*Un Pays 
Clnama: 
a sulvra 

Ganarol 

Hospital 

Edgeot Night 

Another 

World 

Mov to 

Welby. MD 

Edge of Night 

UUk * - - 

Hiyn nopfi 

Toko 34 

Light 

M-A-S-H 

Dinah! 

Id 

2:9 

100 

rm 

World 

Alan 

Hamel 


Cartoon* (2:41) 
Popaya 

Banana Spilt! 

Hillbillies 

Match Gama 

continued 
going Placnt 
Splddrman 

Howard 

On* Summsr 
CFL 

Animegort# 

FiipatCia 

Grendes 

Griffin 

continuad 

Na ws 

ffU 

Howard 

Fllppar 

CFL 

Football 

Emergency 

One! 

Nows 

continued 

• 4:« 

4: Jd 
1:44 

$:34 

Lucy Show 

Emergency 

continuad 

Gong Show 

Sesame 

Street 

Mr. Rogers 
tiectrleCe. 

Superstars 

Beaver 

i Love Lucy 
Bewitched 

Gilltgen 

My Three Sone 
i Love Lucy 

Partridges 

Squares 







EVE. 






fill 

CaSoir 

Rencontres 

La Mona 

Haws 

Lima Vic 
ShaNaNa 

continuad 

Soottta 

Noma To no 

continuad 

continuad 

continuad 

M.T. Moor# 
Tall Truth 
Tattle Talas 

4:04 

4:14 

7:04 

7:14 

continuad 

Stars on lea 

Saarch 

Zoom 

Over Easy 

Mac Nail 
Newsmakers 

My Throe Son* 
Hogan 

Adam-12 

Gong Show 

Joker's Wild 

On The Buses 

BobNewhert 

Vancouver 

Hourglass 

M.T MOOTS 

Variety '74 

Las Fittas 

Pdwion 

La Pont 

Lavarna 

continuad 

Roofs 

MOV* 

contlnuod 

continued 

Walk 

Mov la 

Spider man 

continuad 

Movie 

0 00 

IN 
1:4 
t » 

continuad 

Funny Farm 

Soap 

world 

TBA 

Two Ronnies 

continuad 

continuad 

continuad 

Merv 

Griffin 

continued 

continued 

Roots 

continued 

TBA 

Ryan • Fancy 

Potderk (1140) 

Paoa 

Sports 

Aiftsl Va 

La Via 

continuad 

continuad 

News 

contlnuod 

contlnuod 

NOWS 

Johnny 

continuad 

continuad 

continuad 

continuad 

continuad 

News 

Movie (H 45 

tom 

tt 14 
1104 

11:34 

Lou 

Grant 

News 

continuad 

Mon 

Dick Cevett 

Book Boot 

Lover Experts 

Odd Couple 

Love 

Show 

Love Experts 
Movie (11:44) 

continued 

Sports Pago 
continued 

continuad 

CintfTta 

a suivra 
a sulvra 

continuad 

continuad 

continuad 

Corson 

contlnuod 

Tomorrow 

Movie (12:10) 

contlnuod 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

1104 

1114 

Movie (12:40) 

continued 

continuad 


continued 

1! 

continued 

Growctie 


Spotlight on Movies 


Wf 


K 

<St\. 




THE CHAINS that bound a whole race of people in 
America snap open triumphantly when the ABC Televi¬ 
sion Network presents an encore showing of Roots, the 
12-hour drama of one family’s liberation which in¬ 
cludes Edward Asner (left) and LeVar Burton among 
its stare, beginning Tuesday, Sept. 5 at 9 p m on 
channels 4 and 13. 


Horror House, on 8 at 12:34 

p.m. British made thriller 
about knife murders during a 
haunted-house party. Jill 
Haworth and Frankie Avalon 
(1960) 

The Longest Hundred 
Niles, on 11 at 1 p.m. Drama 
set during the invasion of 
Luzon in 1942. Doug McClure 
and Katharine Ross (1968). 

Medical Story* on 6 at 3 
p.m. Drama, pilot for the 
television series which, fo¬ 
cuses on the risks of unnecev 
sary surgery. Beau Bridges 
and Jose Ferrer (1975). 

Little Mo, on 5 at 8 p.m. 
Drama about the life of 
Maureen Connolly, played by 
Glynnis O’Connor, a teenager 
who excelled in the game of 
tennis between 1951—1954 
Made for television in 1978. 

Cougar Country, on II at 8 

p.m. Documentary about a 
young muonIhin lion In the 
Rockies (1973) 

Fust, on I at 9 p.m. Com¬ 
edy-drama. for details see 
Monday 's listing on Channel 8 
at 9 p.m. 


Happily Ever After, on 7 at 
9 p.m. Comedy^irama made 
for television, about an aspir 
ing singer in Las Vegas and a 
Oregon lumberjack who falls 
I love *itli her. Suzanne 
Somers and Bruce Boxleitner 
(1978). 


One Foot In Hell, an I a 

12:19 a.m. Western based on 
the television play. The Last 
Man. starring Alan Ladd 

(1898) 

Urn Curse af Blgfaet, on 8 
at 12:19 a.m. Thriller about 
California highschoo! stu¬ 


dents terrorized by a moo 
ster William Simonsen and 
Robert ClymirK197Z). 

The Long Chase, on 7 at 3 
a.m. Wester* made for tele 
vision, complied from parts 
of the Alias Smith and Jones 
series. Roger Davis aid Be* 
Murphy (1972) 


The Last Picture Show, oo 
4 at 11:31 p.m. Drama direct. 
ed by Peter Bogdanovich, 
about the lives and loves of 
people in a small town during 
the early 1989s in Texas. Tim¬ 
othy Bottoms. Jeff Bridges 
and Cloris Leachman (1971). 


Today's Highlights 

Good Morning America, a* Ron Neaeeu reflect an 

4 at 7 a.m. Among the guests their jobs, bosses and rrta 
this morning is Henry tionships with the press. 
Fonda. 


Don’t Drink Che Water, on 7 
and 12 at 11:48 p.m. Comedy 
based an Woody Allen’s 
Broadway hit about a family 
whose Greek vacation is 
disrupted when they’re hi¬ 
jacked. Jackie Gleason, Es¬ 
telle Parson and Ted Bessell 
(1999) 


Call of the Blood, on 13 at 
midnight. British made 
drama about a husband who 
flirts with a servant giri while 
his wife is away. John Justin, 
Lea Padovml and Kay Ham¬ 
mond (1948) 


One Northern Summer, on 
2 at 4:31 p.m. A film about the 
Arctic. 

Roots, oo 4 and Q at 9 p.m. 

Return of this adaptation of 
Alex Haley’s best seller, to be 
shown over five consecutive 
nights—starting tonight. 
(ABC plans to issue an an- 
noucement warning that the 
progrm may not ho suitable 
for ad family members) 

Some of the Presidents’ 
Men, on 9 it 19 p.m. Former 
presidential presa secre¬ 
taries Pierre Salinger, 
Georgs Reedy, Ron Ziegler 


Cable 10 
Program 

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER S 
t p.m. Here’s Lowtber 
9:39 p.m. Spectrum Dance 
circus—video-taped at Mar 
ket Square and showing the 

C at scope of this young 
ce company. 

7 p.m. Music Victoria. 

7J9 p.m. Fittness, Fatness 
and Fun. 

8:39 p.m. Pacific Inquiry 


A LIFETIME 
OF COMFORT 


eufodouM 


DOWN FILLED 

. CONTINENTAL OUILTS • PILLOWS 
• QUILT COVERS • BED RUFFLES • SHEETS 


THE EUROPEAN 


Opwld^MKMk 

•rom *30 t» KM 


1721 DOUGLAS WCTOHA 
(nfp tiWi Tin 9ny) 394-0133 


QUILTS 


M2 SEYMOUR. VANCOUVER 
In ttw SAY FARKAOE. WS-MJ3 


’EIPERPOWNSHOP 


4711 KIMflMY. MHAir 

|i>pi a i Swr»|. U7 CM 


CM 

■ ■ 













































1 


PAG! EIGHT 


Wednesday, September 6 


CBC (3) 

CBUFT (D 

KOMO ® 

KING (£ 

CHEK 3) 

KIRO ® 

TIME 

CHAN (D 

KCTS ® 

KSTW (Q) 

KVOS IB) 

ckvuHS 

lo Touch 


Good Morning 
America 

Crosswits 

Boomerang 

Today 

continued 

Seattle 

Today 

Canada A M. 

continued 

Daybreak 

Joyce Davidson 

continued 

Phil 

Donahue 

lie 

IN 

♦ te 

* M 

Cenada A M. 

continued 

Cooking 

Joyce Davidson 


Zoo Revue 

Comedy 

Price 

continued 

Phil 

Donahue 

Huntley St. 
continued 
continued 

Giant 

Mr Dressop 

Stsom# 

stroet 

Mouwement 

DuSoHil 

Mag-Ex press 

Las Marlas 

Happy Days 
Pyramid 

Family Feud 
Ryan's Hope 

Rollers 

Fortune 

America 

Alive 

Giant 

Mr Dressup 
Barton, 

Company 

All in Family 

Love of Lite 
Young 

Search 

II M 

II 31 

n m 

l»:m 

Tracy 

Definition 

Yoga 

Your Move 


Id! 

Van Dyke 

Love 

Medical 

Canter 

Young 

Family Feud 
Ryan's Hope 

Jt 

Ilii 

Liberte 

Roulettes 

Reflats 

Alt My 

Children 

One Life 

TtUve 

Squares 

Devs of 

Our Lives 

Doctors 

nows; Ido 

Clarkson 

Sanford. Son 
Marcus 

As World 

Turns 

Guiding 

I7M 

12 31 

IN 

131 

Grizzly 

Adams 

continued 


News 

Movie 

continued 

Price 

is Right 

Ail la Family 

Doc at Sea 

All My 

Children 

Vancouver 

continued 

Edge o( Night 

Take 30 

DOM Rays 

La Tamps 
DeVIvra 
b suivre 

General 

Hospital 

Edge of Night 
More 

Another 

World 

Movie 

continued 

Weiby, MO 

Edgeof Nlghf 
Hoptl 

TsktJO 

Light 

M-A-S-H 

Dinah1 

2ee 

2:31 

3-.m 

3:31 

Another 

World 

Alan 

Hamel 

‘ ? | 

continued 

Cartoone (2:49) 

Poptya 

Banana Splits 

M-A-S-H 

H *lb»ilies 

Match Game 

Vic Franklyn 
Party Game 
Going Pieces 
Spider man 

Howard 

Vision On 

Cooks 

till 

Griffin 

continued 

News * 

continued 

continued 

tontinued 

Newlyweds 

News 

Howard 

FUfUWf 

Doris Day 

Emergency 

One! 

News 

continued 

IN 

4:31 

see 

». 31 

Lucy Show 
Emergency 
continued 

Gong Show 

Sesame 

•treat 

Mr. Rogers 
Electric Ce. 

Superstars 

I Love Lucy 
Partridgee 

Funorame 

Giiitgen 

My Three Sons 

1 Love Lucy . 

ill! 







EVK. 






Hourglass 

continued 

M.T. Moor# 

iili 

News 

News 

Huskies m 7* 

continued 

News 

Seattle 

continued 

Wonders 

Baseball. 

M.T. Moore 
Tail Truth 

IN 

4 30 

;ee 

Z:J* 

continued 

continued 

Grizzly 

Adams 

Zoom 

Over Easy 
MacNeil 

Life 

My Throe Sons 

Adam-12 

Gong Show 
Joker's Wild 
Patricks'* Wives 

Bob Newbert 

Vancouver 

continued 

continued 

continued 

New York 

n. 

Elgin 

is Enough 

§ham— - 

continued \ 

Dick Clark 
continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

IN 

1:31 
♦ ee 
•:» 

Eight's 

Enough 

Movie 

Greet 

Per 

formencas 

continued 

Calloway's 

Climb 

Everest 

The hard Way 

Merv 

Griffin 

continued 

continued 

Roofs 

continued 

continued 

On Baseball 

Nows 

Shades <11*:40) 

Jazz 

Sports 

Fortrolts 

de Femmes f 

continued 

continued 

News 

Police 

continued 

continued 

Johnny 

continued 

On Beaebeii 

Haws 

continued 

incredible 

Hulk 

HaweHiU 45 

n.m 

UN 

II M 
11:31 

continued 

continued 

News 

continued 

Odyssey 

OickCavett 

News 

Love Experts 

Odd Couple 

Gong Show 

Evangelism 

Love Experts 
Hawaii 

continued 

Sports 

Page 

Ol Green 

Cinema 
a sulvre 
ssulvre 
a sulvre 

IjwTt 

(11:49) 

Person 

continued 

Tomorrow 

Movie H11IT " 
continued 

continued 

FTvt-O 

Alias 1 12,53) 
Smith 

12:11 

12 N 

Movie (12 11) 

continued 

continued 

Losers 

TOO Club 

News 

Flve-0( 11:45) 

Allas (12 55) 

Smith 

continued 

Movie 

continued 

continued 

Groueho 



TOM AND ERICA are together at last, 
and the unlikely setting is the water¬ 
front of Christiansted, the old Dutch 
city on the island of St. Croix. The ABC 
Television Network’s daytime drama 
“All My Children” went on location to 
tte beautiful island to shoot the roman¬ 


tic interlude between the two lovers — 
played by Dick Shoberg and Susan 
Lucci. Daytime viewers may share the 
pair’s happiness and the beautiful sce¬ 
nery of St. Croix beginning September 6 
when All My Children airs at noon. 


Spotlight on Movies 


Mam ho, on 11 at I p.m. 

Italian-made soap opera 
about the romantic problems 
of a shopgirl who becomes 
the star of a dance troupe 
Silvana Mangano, Shelley 
Winterss and Vittorio Gass- 
man (1954) 

Fade la, i t S p.m. 
Drama about a cowboy and a 
film editor who meet on toca 
tion while shooting a western 
Interesting Utah scenery 
Burt Reynolds, Barbara 
Loden and Patricia Casey 
(1M?) 

Dr. Strange, oa 7 at S p.m. 
Fantasy made for television 
about a psychiatrist involved 
in demoniac possesion 
(1978). 

The Neptnne Disaster, oa 8 
at 9 p.m. Canadian made sci¬ 
ence fiction about the hunt for 
a submarine lab dislodged by 
an earthquake. Ben Gazzara 
and Yvette Mimieux (1973). 

Polly Me Law, on 13 at 
mMnight. Australian made 
drama about an escaped con¬ 
vict who falls in love with an 


Saroyan's Play 
On Channel 9 

> William Saroyan’s The 
Time of Your Life encores as 
part of Great Performances 
-Theatre in America on Wed¬ 
nesday, Sept. 6, at 9 p.m. 
(rebroadcast Sunday, Sept. 
10, at 3 p.m ) on Public TV 
9. 

The drama evokes the na 
tional mood just before the 
Second World War, reflecting 
a period of thwarted aspira¬ 
tions and flagging spirits. Its 
characters express a bewil 
dered disenchantment with 
the way things are. 


inkeepers daughter Jackie 
Weaver. 

R mu Angel, Raa, aa • at 

12:19 a.m. Motorcycle melo¬ 
drama starring William 
Smith and Valerie Starrett 

(1999) 

Bitters Are Challenged, an 
t at 12:19 a.m. Italian-made 
spy yam starring Richard 


Waverley Wanders, aa 9 at 
7 p.m. Debut: comedy series 
in which Joe Namath plays a 
highschool basketball coach. 

Sharks: tba Death Ma¬ 
chines, on S t 9 p.m. Under 
water photography highlights 
this documentary about (be 
great white shark. Filmed 
mainly off the Australian 
coast. The program aho in¬ 
cludes a survivor’s account of 
an attack by a great white 
shark, who sustained injuries 
which required more than 700 
stitches. 

Roots—drama, on 4 and 13 

at 9 p.m. Part two of this 
series based on the novel by 
Alex Haley. 

Dick Clark—Variety, on S 
at 9:39 p.m. A preview of Dick 


Harrison. Theater?is about a 
search for nkidllin with in 
formation from Russia 
(1990) 

AH the King's Men, an 7 at 
2:49 n.m. Oscar-winning 
drama abort the rise an fall 
of a politician. Broderick 
Crawford, Mercedes 
McCambridge and John Ire 
land (1999). 


Clark’s prime-time seriesfea 
turing music and comedy, 
and film clips recalling the 
life styles and dance crazes of 
the ’50s and 80s. 

Cable 10 
Program 

WEDNESDAY, SEPT. € 

6 p.m. Here’s Lowther 
6:30 p.m Natural Garden¬ 
ing. 

7 p.m. Arts Calendar. 

7.30 p m. Victoria City 

Council Meetings. 



^TOUU^JUTCHES^ 


Speedy Muffler King installs 
Class 1 & Class 2 trailer hitches at excelle:it 
pnees. All hitches guaranteed 

At this Speedy location: 2992 Douglas St. 

(at Spruce) Tbl 385-8717. 

^smpnromntMHG; 


Today's Highlights 


P ; 


CBC (2) 


In Touch 
continued 
Giant 


Mr Dross up 



Summer 

More* 


McLoan 


Cooks Tow 
SOto Of Nigh? 

High Hoots 

_ 

Howard 

Taking Pictures 
Coots 

All In Family 


Hourglass 
continued 
M T.Moort 
Concert 
Due boss 
of Dun* 

Denny s Show 
Honestly 

Goorfo 

Con-Authors 

Mown 

iecrit 

ArmJ(1l 40) 


The WHd Rac 
12:30 p.m. Dra 
race-car driver, 
and his girls. 
Mimsy Fanner i 

In Search of Gi 
at I p-iN- British 
about a young i 
mg tove in Genev 
location and st; 
Christie and Mi 
zin (1979) 

Nnrwnnd, an 

Comedy drama i 

try—western i 
meets a lonely ci 
Campbell and 
(1970). 

The Neptune l 

at 9 p.m. Scienc 
details see Wedr 
ing on Channel 


File It Under I 
mMnight. Britisl 



JACQUES UFC 
the greatest scu 
20th century, wa 
of great personal 
and charm. It is 
man that is cap) 
ques Lipchitz, a 
day. Sept. 7, at 
The angular sui 
early cubism fil 
(he years until, 
in 1973, Lipchitz 
imprisoning a k 
energy in bronzf 





















































Thursday, September 7 


PAGE MNt 


esc (2) 

courr (3) 

KOMO ® 

KINO (£ 

CHEK ® 

KIRO ® 

TIME 

CHAN ® 

KCTS® 

KSTW © 

KVOS © 

CKVUdS 

In Touch 
continued 


Good Morning 
America<7a m.) 
Cress-Wits 
TraahouM 

Today 

continued 

Seattle 

Today 

Canada M. 

continued 

Daybreak 

Joyce Davidson 

News 

continued 

Donahue 

Magazine 

• M 
IN 
M» 

in 

Canada A M. 

continued 

Cooking 

Joyce Davidson 


Zoo Revue 
Comedy 

Marcus 

continued 

Phil 

Donahue 

Huntley St 

Giant 

Mr Dress-Up 

Street 

Moovomont 

Moo moot# 

Mag-Express 

Clnte»tes 

Happy Day, 
Pyramid 

Family Feud 
Ryan, Hope 

Rollers 

Fortune 

America 

Alive 

Giant 

Mr Drassup 
Barton, 

Company 

continued 
Love Of Life 
Young 

Search 

t«:M 

in jo 

DM 

UN 

Tracy 

Definition 

Yoga 

Your Move 


Welby, MD 

Mika 

continued 

Van Dyke 

Lava of Life 
Medical 

Canter 

Ed Allan 

Young 

Femtty Feud 
Ryan's Hope 

Summer 

tmrch 

no $ 

McLean 

Cheveuk 

Roulettes 

Clamanca 

Rofiott 

All My 

Children 

On# Life 

To Live 

Squares 

Days of 

Our Lives 

Doctors 

Newt, Ida 

Clarkson 

Sanford, Son 
Marcus 

As World 
Turns 

Guiding 

«:• 

12: ID 
1:« 

1 M 

Movie 

continued 

continued 


News 

Movie 

continued 

Magazine 

continued 

Ail In Family 
OocAtS^ 

Alt My 
Children 

Cook, Tour 

Edge of Night 
High Mope, 

Taka 10 

D'Un Day, 
Cinema 
a tuivra 

General 

Hospital 

Bdga of Night 
Marv 

Another 

World 

Movie 

Wei by, MD 

Edge of Night 

rrr^n nvpfi 

Take 3D 

Light 

M-A-S-H 

Dinah! 

1:M 

19 

IN 

1-.J9 

Another 

world 

Alan 

Hamel 


continued 

Cartoons (2:49) 

Fopeyo 
tonana Split, 

Hillbillies 

Match Gama 

continued 

going Places 

Maward 

Taking Pictures 
Cooka 

Anlmagarla 

Gobeiet 

Vlvraat 

Griffin 

conflnood 

NOW, 

continued 

continued 

Newlyweds 

News 

Howard 

Flipper 

Doris Day 

Emergency 

One! 

continued 

4 W 

in 

IN 

sn 

Lacy Show 

Emergency! 

continued 

Gong Show 

Spsame 

Street 

Mr. Rogers 

Electric Ce. 

Superstars 

••aver 

1 Lava Lucy 
Partridges 

Puearama 

GiMIgan 

My Three Sans 
l Lava Lucy 

Rascals 

Partridge, 

Squares 







EVE. 






Hourglass 

continued 

M T Moore 
Concert 

CaSoir 

Rencontre, 

Genie, 

Foople- 

Ftace 

continued 

continued 

Seattle 

Match Gam# 

News • 

Hawaii 

Flvo-O 

News 

M.T. Moore 
Tail Truth 
Tatttatatas 

id 
• Jf 

;.m 

7 9 

New, 

continued 

Another Day 

Did Country 

Zoom 

Ovor Easy 

MacNeil 

wodahouse 

Brady Bunch 

My Three Sons 
Hogan 

Adam-12 

Fishing 
GengShew 
Joker's Wild 

On the Buses 

Corel Burnett 

Bob Newhe^t 

continued 

Ouches, 
of Duks 

Danny » Show 

Lao Grands 

Film* 
a tuivra 

Root, 

continued 

continued 

Joe 

Nemeth 

Grandpa 

Duchess of 

Duka Street 
Movie 

Walton, 

Hawaii 

Fiva-O 

in 

IN 

tn 

t:3 

Grandpa 

continued 

The Future 

Soap 

Opera 

Theater 

Jacques 

Lipchitz 

Oonna Fargo 

Marty Robbins 
Doily 

Pep Goes 

Newlyweds 

Griffin 

continued 

Roots 

continued 

Georg# 

Can-Author, 

New, 

SecrO ^ 

a tuivra 

Sport, 

Campegno 
a tuivra 

continued 

continued 

Newt 

Startky. 

Lifeline 

continued 

Johnny 

continued 

continued 

continued 

News 

M-A-S-H 

ItM 

Writ 

11: m 

11: JD 

Lifeline 

continued 

continued 

Two Ronntes 

Cinema: SC. 

Dick Cavatt 
Turnabout 

Lava Exports 

Odd Couple 

Gong Show 

Clea 

Lama 

Love Experts 
M-A-S-H (11 43) 

continued 

Sports 

Rf 

ArmJ (11 40) 

Cinema 
o tuivra 

Hutch 

SWAT. 

(12:41) 

Carson 

continued 

Tomorrow 

Movie (12:10) 

continued 
continued 
continue- 

(11 45) 

Movie (12 20) 
continued 

y>" tin «R— 

12 M * 

12 30 

Movie (li 10) 

continued 

continued 

continued 


700 Club 
continued 

Movie (12 20) 
continued 
continuad 
continued 

continuad 

continuad 


Spotlight on Movies 


THURSDAY, SEFT. 7 


11k RIM Raters, on 8 at 
12:3$ p.m. Drama about a 
race-car driver, bis career 
and his girls. Fabian and 
Mimsy Farmer (1968). 

hi Search nf Gregory , oa 11 
at I p.m British made drama 
about a young woman seek 
mg lave in Geneva. Filmed on 
locatioa and starring Julie 
Christie and Michael Sarra 
/in (1979) 

Norwood, oa S at 3 p.m. 

Comedy-drama about a coun¬ 
try-western singer who 
meets a lonely city girl. Glen 
Campbell and Kim Darby 
(1970). I 

The Neptune Disaster, on • 

at 9 p.m. Science fiction, for 
details see Wednesday's list¬ 
ing on Channel 8 at 9 p m. 

File II Under Fear, an 13 at 
midnight. British-made mys¬ 


tery about a series of mur 
ders among members of a 
rural community. Maureen 
Lipman and Richard O'Cal¬ 
laghan Made for television in 
1973). 

The Oblong Box, on t at 

12:19 a na. British made 
thriller based on the story by 
Edgar Allan Poe, about Afri¬ 
can tribal rites, premature 
burial and vengeance Chris 
topher Lee (1970) 

The Amazing World of Psy¬ 
chic Phenomena, on 8 at 12:10 
a.m. Documentary style look 
at the world of supernatural, 
narrated by Raymond Burr 
(1976) 

I Will Fight Nn More For¬ 
ever, on 7 and 12 at 12:20 a.m. 
Drama which tells the story 
of Chief Joseph of the Nez 
Perce, who refused to take 
his tribe to a reservation in 


1877, tryig instead to lead 
them to safety into Canada. 

Bonjonr Tristesse, no 7 at 2 
a.m. Lavishly produced 
drama based on the first no¬ 
vel by Francoise Sagan. 
Beautiful countryside setting 
of France and Italy, but the 


script overstates th« more 
melodramatic aspects of the 
story about a young girl who 
hero-worships her father and 
resents his mistress. Direct¬ 
ed by Otto P re mi nger and 
starring Deborah Kerr. 
David Niven an 4 Jean Seberg 
(1998) 


| Cable 10 
j Program 


9 p.m. Here's Low the r 
9:99 p m- Monk Victoria 
T p.m Vie West Happen 

Hg^ 

7:99 p.m. Pro-Natal Yoga. 
• p.m T.B.A. 


Today's Highlights 



Roots, oa 4 and 13 at 8 pjn. 

Part 3 of this drama based on 
the novel by Alex Haley. 

Grandpa Goes In Washing¬ 
ton, oa 8 at 8 p.m. New com¬ 
edy-drama with Hack albert- 
son as a retired professor 
who gets a chance to practice 
what he taught. 

Opera Theater, oa 9 at t 
p.m. Leonard Bernstein's 
Trouble in Tahiti, a satirical 
1992 opera about a day in the 
lives of a bickering suburban 
couple—played by Julian pa- 
trick and Nancy Williams 

Lifeline, on 3 and 8 at 19 

p.m. New profile series fea¬ 
turing the day-to-day lives of 
real doctors—on and off the 
job. 

Clea Laiae, an 12 at 19 p.m. 
Jazz vocalist Cleo Laine per¬ 
forms In cncert. Appearing 


with her in a saxophone spot 
is her husband John Dank 
worth. 

Canadian Anthers, on 2 at 
1939 p.m. Scheduled for to¬ 
night's program is an inter¬ 
view with Hugh MacLennan. 


JACQUES LIPCHITZ, one of 
(he greatest sculptors of the 
20th certtury, was also a man 
of great personal wit, wisdom 
and charm. It is Lipchitz the 
man that is captured in Jac¬ 
ques Lipchitz, airing Thurs¬ 
day, Sept. 7, at 9 p.m. on 9. 
The angular surfaces of his 
early cubism filled out over 
(he years until, by his death 
in 1973, Lipchitz seemed to be 
imprisoning a kind of lumpy 
energy In bronze. 



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PACE TIN 


Friday, September 8 


CBC (2) 

cbuft® 

KOMO ® 

KING ® 

CHEK ® 

KIRO ® 

TIME 

CHAN ® 

KCTS ® 

KSTW (TJ 

KVOS (B> 

CKVU® 

in Touch 


Good Morning 
Amor ice 
Cross-Wits 
Treehouse 

Todey 

continued 

Seems 

Today 

Canada A M. 

continued 

Deybreek 

Joyce Davidson 

News 

continued 

Phil 

Done hue 

IN 

• M 

9 00 

♦ M 

Cenede A.M. 

continued 

Cooking 

Joyce Davidson 


Zoo Revue 
Comedy 

Mercus 

Frolics 

Phil 

Donahue 

Huntley St. 

continued 

continued 

Giant 

Mr Dm sop 

Sturm 

Street 

Mouvement 

Ciak 

Meg-C sprees 

i loppy Beys 

Pyramid 

Family Feud 

Rollers 

Fortune 

Amor ice 

Alive 

Gient 

Mr Dressop 
Berton. 

Company 

All In Femily 

Love of Live 
Young 

Soorch 

10 M 
10:10 

1100 

11:30 

Trecy 

Definition 

Yogs 

Your Move 


Welby, MD 

Mike 

Dougies 

continued 

Von Dyke 

Love of Life 
Medical 

Cantor 

Young 

Femily Feud 
Ryan's Hope 

Summer 

Ryan t Hop* 

Bob 

Roulettes 

TouveiHe 

All My 

Children 

One Life 

To Live 

Squares 

Days of 

Our Lives 

Doctors 

News; ids 

Clerk son 

Sanford. Son 

As World 

Turns 

Guiding 

12:00 

12:30 

1:00 

1:30 

News » 

Movie 

continued 

continued 


Jeonnie 

Movie 

continued 

Prlca 

is Right 

All In Family 
OocatSao 

All My 

Children 

Vancouver 

continued 

Concern 

Edge of Night 

D*Ue Rays 

Let Ateliers 
osuivre 

General 

Edge of Night 

Another 

World 

Movies 

Wotby. MD 

> Edge of Night 
r High Hopes 

Take 30 

Light 

M-A-S-H 

DinahI 

7:10 

2:30 

3 00 
*30 

Another 

World 

Alan 


continued 

Cartoons (2:49) 
Popeye 

Banana Splits 

M-A-S-H 

Hillbillies 

Match Game 
Jeonnie 

continued 

continued 
Going Pieces 
Spider men 

Hunter's Goto 
Cooks 

POUTQUOi 

LOS 

Griffin 

continued 

Newt 

Newt 

continued 

continued 
hmly ve4s 

News 

Howard 

Flipper 

Doris Dey 

News 

Emorgtncy 

One! 

News 

4 00 

4 30 

5 00 

$30 

Lucy Show 

Emergency! 

continued 

Gong Show 

Street 

Mr. Rogers 

Electric Ce. 

Beaver 

1 Love Lucy 
Bewitched 

Glllfgan 

My 3 Sons 
l Love Lucy 

Partridges 

Squares 







EVE. 






Hourglass 

continued 

M.T. Moore 

Reach for Tap 

CeSotr * 

Las Bettes 

Hlstoires 

continued 

continued 

KlooworW 

Moppets 

continued 

News 

Seett»e 

Squeres 

continued 

Lawrence 

News 

N.T, Moore 

Movie 

continued 

4 00 
4:30 
7:00 

7:30 

News 

continued 

TBA f 

Julie 

Blue Merbie 

Over Eesy 
MecNeii 

Victory Gerden 

My 3 Sons 

Adam-12 

Gong Show 

Joker's Wild 

Doc on Go 

Bob Newhert 

Vancouver 

continued 

Duchess of 

Duke Street 

Hotel io 

Meitret 

Ft Volets 

Happy Deys 

Moony Deys 

Roots 

Rollers 

Supersters 

Eddie Copra 

Duchess of 

Duke Street 
Netolle 

Cole 

continued 

continued 

Movie 

continued 

0:00 

0:30 

*00 

t:30 

Women 

Sword 

Of 

Wash Week 

Well Street 

Meyer ef 
Cesterbrldge 

Doting Gome 

Marine Life 

Hot City. 

Music 

Merv 

Griffin 

continued 

continued 

Roots 

continued 

Zoo 

Gong 

News 

Movie (11:40) 

Reelite 

Sports 

Ctneme 
e stdvro 

continued 

News 

Berefte 

continued 

continued 

News 

Eight's 

Enough 

continued 

continued 

continued 

Nows 

Ntovfr (11:45) 

10:00 

M:30 

11:00 

11:30 

Justice 

continued 

continued 

Bernstein 

DlckCevett 

Life 

Fern wood 

Odd Coup's 

Gong Show 

Variety 

Love Experts 

Movie (11:49) 

continued 

Sports 

Page 

continued 

continued 

continued 

osuivre 

Cine Nutt 
osuivre 

continued 
Avengers (12:40) 
continued 

Corson 

continued 

Midnight 

Movie (12:10) 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

Movie 

17 00 

17 30 

Movie (12 10) 

continued 

L continued 


Comedy Shop 

700 Club 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

continued 

700 Club 

continued 

continued 

Movie 





ACTRESS MARY TYLER MOORE, 
shown here with a new hair style, will 
be hack on TV this fall with a new 
series, Mary. It will be a variety show 
with a resident company, and no guest 
stars. She and seven characters will do 
sketches, songs and dances. She says I 


cut my hair for two reasons, “first I 
was going to China, and they don’t have 
things like blow-dryers, and then I 
thought it would be good physically to 
get away from the Mary Richards 
look.” 


Spotlight on Movies 


Creatare with the Blue 
Hand. Nil 12:3a p.m. Or 
man made thriller with 
Klaus Kinski in the role of 
twins, one of whom may be a 
diabolic killer (1967) 

* Kimberley Jim, on 11 at 1 
p.m. South African-made 
comedy about two gamblers 
who win a diamond mine and 
try to keep It running Jim 
Reeares, Clive Parnell and 
Madeleine Usher (1965). 

Rapture, oa 5 at 3 p.m. A 
romantic drama about a re 
tired judge who keeps his 
beautiful daughter isolated 
from the world. Melvya 
Douglas, Dean Stockwell and 
Patricia Goxxi (1965) 

The Comic, oa 7 at 7 p.m. 
Comedy-drama with Dick 
Van Dyke as The Comic, the 
story is about his life from 
silent films to television com 
merciais. Also m the cast are 
Mickey Rooney and Cornel 
Wild# (1969). 

Something for Joey, on 7 at 

• p.m. True-life drama of 
courage and love—the rela¬ 
tionship between Heisman 
Trophy winner John Cappel- 
letti and his little brother 
Joey, who is stricken with 
leukemia. Marc Singer. Jeff 
Lynas and Geraldine Page 
(lf77). 

Barabbas. oa 2 at 11:46 
p.m. Italian-made, lavish 
Biblical spectacle about the 
thief whom Jesus replaced on 
the cross of crucifixion. Fine 
performances by Anthony 
Quinn, Sllvana Mangano, 
Arthur Kennedy. Jack Pa 
lance and Ernest Borgnine 
(1962) 

Theatre of Death, on 7 at 
1:45 a m. British-made thrill¬ 
er about vampire like mur 


ders in Paris Christopher 
Lee, Lelia Goldoni and Jenny 
Till (1967) 

Hells Angels on Wheels, on 
12 at 1:45 a.m. Stark melo¬ 
drama filmed in California 
and Nevada, and starring 
Jack Nickolson and Adam 
Roarke (1967), 

A Killer ia Every Corner, 
oo 13 at midnight. British 
made mystery about a psy 
chologist who uses people to 
test the behaviour pattern of 
killers. Joanna Pattet, Pa 
trick Magee and Petra Mark 
ham (1974). 

The Salzburg Connection, 
on € at 12:19 a.m. Spy story 
based oo the book by Helen 
Maclnnes, about the hunt for 
incriminating Second World 


War documents Barry New 
man, Anna Karina and Karen 
Jensen (1072). 

Mafia, oa 8 at 12:19 a.m. 

Italian-made crime drama 
about a Sicilian village do 
minated by the underworkl 
Lee J. Cobb. Claudia Cardin 
ale and Franco Nero (1998) 

Godzilla vs. the Smog Mon 
ster, on 7 at 1:39 a.m. Japa 
nese made science fiction 
about a creature that thrives 
on factory fumes. Akira Ya- 
mauchi and Hiroyuki Kawasi 
(1971). 

l T p Pompeii, on 13 at 1:39 

t.m. British made satire 
about the ancient Italian 
city’s legendary last days 
Frankie Howard. Patrick 
Cargill and Michael Hordern 
(1971) 


Today's Highlights 


Kids world Preview, on 4 at 
7 p.m. A preview of the 
award-winning series by 
young people. (Kldsworld 
will be seen regularly Sunday 
mornings beginning Septem 
ber 19). 

Bay City Rollers, Meet Sat 
nrday Superstars, an » at t 
p.m. The Bay City Rollers 
are the hoots of this preview 
of NBC’s Saturday morning 
shows. 

Roots, on 4 and 13 at 9 p.m. 

Part 4 of this drama based on 
the nove by Alex Haley. 

Sword of Justice, on 8 at 9 
p.m. Debut: adventure series 
with Dack Rambo as a play 
boy by day and a crime fight 
er by night 

Hot Cfty-Musk. on 11 at 9 
p.m. Debut: featured on the 


first of a series of programs 
of disco music and dance are 
Linda Clifford and tbo 
Sylvers. % 

Cable 10 
Program 

FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER t 

6 p.m. Here’s Lowther. 
6:30 p m Homegrown 

Music. 

7 p.m. Natural Gardening 
7:30 p.m. Provincial Dia¬ 
logue 

8 p m. Who Cares? 

8:30 p.m. M.P. Report 


V 


CE 


SATURDA 
AM Merit oi 

2:05 p.m. Opera 
quest — Host Bi 
plays listeners’ 
opera selections 
should be directed 
By Request. CBC, 
Station ‘A,’ Toronto 
M52 1E6. 

8:05 p.m. The M< 
gers On — A progn 
ed to the great - 
song writers pecfoy 
wide variety of art 
Is Bruno Cimolai. 
The Songs of Irvli 
(Part II) 

10:95 p.m. Aath 

Yehuda Amlchai, a 
from the work of tl 
poet, introduced an 
English translation 
Hughes. The Pnet 
The Victorians — 
Jefford. John Tui 
Gabriel Woolf read 
cauley, Tennyson, B 
Arnold. Kipling and 

FM Networ 

12:95 p.m. Touch I 

— Recorded in 
hosts Sylvia Tyson i 
Lennox and pradu< 
Mills visit the shop 
maker Jean Lurrive 
Victoria Folklore 
where More workers 
fiddle and banjo mi 
featured is songwi 
chel Dumont aijd i 
view with local hisU 
pert Ainsley Helml 
tells listeners about 
lory of the island. 


The 

Places to go, 
week 


(Material ft 
to The PrBvui 
2N4, to anrivB 
week precedi 
right to aecef. 


THEATRE 
SATURDAI 
LEGENDS, Tales 
Arthur, Market S< 
p m Continues to Sc 
TWO & TWO MAI 
British comedy pres 
Victoria Actors Ass 
McPherson Playh 
p.m. Plus Victoria 
ties, McPhersoa M 
after the comedy 
mance. 

„ MUSK 
' SATURDAY 
SUMMER SMILE 
with Jerry Gosley, 
Ballroom. Empres 
x 30 p.m. Continues t 
Tuesday through S 
with matinee Saturd 

WEDNESDA 

OPEN SPACE GA 
510 Fort SI., Wave 
performance of eih 
tronic and enviroi 
music from Toronto. 







































AM-FM Radio 


CBC-AM 690 
CBC-FM 105.7 


PAGE ELEVEN 

Highlights 


CBC 


SATURDAY 
AM Network 

2:05 p.m. Opera By Re¬ 
quest — Host Bill Hawes 
plays listeners’ favourite 
opera selections. Requests 
should be directed to: Opera 
By Request, CBC. Box 500. 
Station ‘A,’ Toronto, Ontario. 
M52 IE6 

8:05 p.m. The Melody Lin- 
fers On — A program devot 
ed to the great American 
song writers perfumed by a 
wide variety ofTrtists. Host 
Is Bruno Cimolai. Tonight: 
The Songs of Irving Berlin 
(Part II). 

10:05 p.m. Anthology — 

Yehuda Amichai. a selection 
from the work of the Israeli 
poet, introduced and read in 
English translation by Ted 
Hughes. The Poet’s Voice: 
The Victorians — Barbara 
Jefford, John Turner and 
Gabriel Woolf read from Ma 
cauley, Tennyson, Browning. 
Arnold. Kipling and others. 

EM Network 

•12:05 p.m. Touch the Earth 

— Recorded in Victoria, 
hosts Sylvia Tyson and Doug 
Lennox and producer Paul 
Mills visit the shop of guitar 
maker Jean Lurrivee and the 
Victoria Folklore Centre 
where More workers perform 
fiddle and banjo music. Also 
featured is songwriter Mi¬ 
chel Dumont and an inter¬ 
view with local historical ex¬ 
pert Ainsley HHmkin, who 
tells listeners about the his¬ 
tory of the island. 


THEATRE 

SATURDAY 

LEGENDS. Tales of King 
Arthur, Market Square, 7 
p.m. Continues to Sept. 3. 

TWO A TWO MAKE SEX. 
British comedy presented by 
Victoria Actors Association. 
McPherson Playhouse. 8 
p.m. Plus Victorian Varie¬ 
ties, McPherson Mezzanine 
after the comedy perfor¬ 
mance. 

a MUST 
r SATURDAY 

SUMMER SMILE SHOW, 
with Jerry Gosley, Crystal 
Ballroom. Empress Hotel, 
8:30 p.m. Continues to Sept. 8 
Tuesday through Saturday, 
with matinee Saturday. 

WEDNESDAY 

OPEN SPACE GALLERY. 
510 Fort St., Waveband, a 
performance of ethno-elec- 
tronic and environmental 
music from Toronto, 9 p.m. 


7:05 p.m. International 
Concert — Part 1 — Royal 
Liverpool Philharmonic Or¬ 
chestra; Ralph Kirshbaum. 
cello; Sir Charles Groves, 
conductor. Beckus The Dan 
dipratt (Arnold); In a Sum 
mer Garden (Delius); Cello 
Concerto In E minor (Elgar). 
Part II — Rotterdam Phil 
harmonic Orchestra; Jessye 
Norman, soprano; Edo de 
Waart. conductor: Zueig- 
nung. Ruhe Meine Seele. 
Meinum Kinde, Wiegenlied 
(all by R. Strauss) Sym 
phony No. 4 (Brahms) 


SUNDAY 
AM Network 

1:95 p.m. The Life and 
Time of Sir Noel Coward— 

Where are the Songs We 
Sung? Sir Noel's career as 
actor, playwright, composer 
and director is followed 
through the critically uncer 
tain years immediately after 
the war, and through shows 
like Sigh No More, Pacitto 
I860 and Ace of Clubs. With 
Joyce Grenfell, Cole Lesley, 
Cyril Ritchard, Graham 
Payn, Hermione Gingold. 

9:95 p.m. Folk Fair- Folk 
singer Tom Kines hosts a se¬ 
ries of traditional folk music 
from the English-speaking 
world. Produced by Peter 
Shaw in Ottawa. Tonight: 
Songs for Labour Day. ori 
ginating from the workers of 
the world, including The 
Weaver, The Trans-Canada 
Highway. The Jolly Collier 
Lad and Dark as a Dungeon, 
sung by Kines, with record 
ings by Men of the Deep. 


GALLERIES 

SATURDAY 

ART GALLERY OF 
GREATER VICTORIA. 1040 
Moss St., Wildflower Water- 
colors of Wendy Gibbs, con¬ 
tinues to Sept, 4; Works of 
.Sophie Pemberton, continues 
to Oct. 8; Mountains of the 
Mind, landscapes of C. C. 
Wang, continues to Sept. 24; 
The Inuit Print, continues to 
Oct. 8; rediscovery of the 
work of Mary Riter Hamil¬ 
ton. continues to Oct. 8. 

KYLE'S GALLERY. 1545 
Fort St. at Oak Bay Junction, 
exhibition of Toni Onley 
watercolors. continues 
through September. 

OPEN SPACE GALLERY, 
Polaroid Collaborator), con 
tinues to Oct. 8. 

TUESDAY 

EMILY CARR ARTS 
CENTRE, 207 Government 
St., exhibition by Alberta 
Johnson, continues to Sept. 

15. 


Odetta, I*eter Seeger and 
Anne Briggs. 

FM Network 

3:95 p.m. The Dance- 
Host: Harry Mannis. Today: 
A feature on Denishawn 
(Ruth St. Denis and Ted 
Shawn), prepared at Jacob’s 
Pillow, by Montreal broad¬ 
caster Kati Vita. 

5:95 p.m. Opera Theatre^ 
Host: Jan Tennant. First of 
six programs from the Chica¬ 
go Lyric Opera. Today: 
L’Elisir d’Amore (Donizetti) 
(starring Luciano Pavarotti. 
Margherita Rinaldi, Sir 
Geraint Evans; conductor 
Bruno Bartoletti). 

MONDAY 

AM Network 

8:94 p.m. Play It Again, 
Bob— Veteran record buff 
Bob Pye spins the golden 
oldies from the first 30 years 
of recording history. Tonight 
A look at the Million-Seller 
Ballads, Including O Solo 
Mio, sung by Enrico Caruso; 
When Irish Eyes are Smiling, 
with John McCormack; and 
Campbell and Burr perform 
ing I’m Forever Blowing 
Bubbles. 

11:29 p.m. Nightcap— An 
interview with actress Lynn 
Redgrave. "The Glass Key", 
by Dasiell Hammett. Budd 
Knapp reads Part I of XV of 
this detective novel In which 
shady politicians, ruthless 
underworld bosses, illicit 
lovers and life’s losers are 
caught in a Depression era 
w eb of intrigue and murder. 

FM Network 

4:95 p.m. Arts National- 

Host: Karin Wells. First of a 
ten-week Monday series fea¬ 
turing the complete violin 
and cello sonatas of Beetho¬ 
ven. Recorded in the Great 
Hall of Hart House at the 
University of Toronto, these 
concerts also include several 
sets of the composer’s varia¬ 
tions as well as selected solo 
piano music. Featured ar¬ 
tists: Otto Armin, violin; 
Tsuyoshi Tsutsumi, cello; 
Elyakim Taussig, piano. 
Today: Sonata in D major. 
Op. 12. No. 1 for violin and 
piano; Sonata in F major, Op. 

5 No. 1 for cello and piano. 

9:94 p.m. Festival Recital- 
Host Margaret Pacsu. Part I 

— From the 1978 Bergen Fes¬ 
tival. Norway, Garrick Ohls 
son, piano: Sonata No. 50 In C 
major. Op. 79 (Haydn); So¬ 
nata in D major. Op. 53 
(Schubert); Benediction de 
Dieu dans la solitude, and Les 
Funerailles, (Liszt). Part II 

— From the 1977 Pro Mu$jca 
Antiqua Festival, Bremen, 
West Germany — The Messe 
de Notre Dame (Guillaume 
de Machaut (Capella Anti¬ 
qua, Munich). 


TUESDAY 
AM Network 

2:94 p.m. Crime Serial - 
• Inspector West at Bay," a 
thriller by John Creasey, 
with Patrick Allen as Chief 
Inspector West, and Sarah 
Lawson as his wife, Janet. 

8:94 p.m. Live Wires - A 

weekly sitcom about a tele¬ 
phone answering service, 
written by David Dole, 
Elaine Pope, Chas. Lawther, 
and Christine Foster. Martin 
Short, a veteran of Toronto’s 
Second City troupe, TV, film, 
and many stage appear 
ances, plays Alan Bregman, 
owner of the service. His as¬ 
sistants are Nicole (played 
by Suzette Couture) and 
Mary (Pauline Rennie). 
They become involved In the 
affairs, both business and 
personal, of their clients, all 
of whom are played by Nick 
Nicftols and Jeri Craden. 

FM Network 

4:85 p.m. Arts National — 

Host: Karin Wells. Tuesdays 
feature several international 
concerts and concerts from 
two major summer music 
schools on Vancouver Island 
— Courtenay and Shawnigan 
Lake. Today: From the Ber 
lin Festival, the Cleveland 
Quartet: Quartet in F major 
(Ravel): Quartet No. 2 in F 
major, Op. 92 (Prokofieff). 

9:94 p.m. Sound Reviews — 
Host: Allan McFee. Tonight: 
A feature on the Decca/Lon 
don Florilegium label which 
aims to present perfor¬ 
mances of music from the 
Renaissance to the Romantic 
periods on historically appro¬ 
priate instruments. David 
Klausner talks to Decca pro¬ 
ducer Peter Wadland and to 
conductor and harpsichor 
*dist Christopher Hogwood, 
whose records feature pro¬ 
minently in the Florilegium 
catalogue. Tonight: Music of 
Arne, Geminiani, C.P.E. 
Bach, Purcell, Haydn, Liszt 
and Weber. 

WEDNESDAY 

AM Network 

11:29 p.m. Nightcap — Rob 
Reiner, who played Archie’s 
son in-law, describes the 
’creative communism’ of 
working in All in the Family. 
Also, an item on the abortive 
opening of the Bourse Cul¬ 
tural Centre in Montreal in 
1967; and, ‘The Glass Key," 
by Dashiell Hammett — Epi¬ 
sode III. 

12:19 a.m. Eclectic Circas 
— Host Allan McFee pres¬ 
ents a mixture of several 
musical idioms in his own 
wry and witty style — from 
Bach to Brubeck 

FM Network 

4:94 p.m. Arts National — 


Host: Karin Wells. Wednes¬ 
days feature chamber music 
and solo recitals by Canadian 
artists across the country. 
Today: From Montreal, Luis 
Grinhaus, violin; Robert 
Verebes, viola; Yuli 
Turovsky, cello; Berta Grin- 
hdtos, piano: Poeme Juif 
(1977) (Milton Barnes); 
Quartet In G minor. Op. 25 
(Brahms). 

9:94 p.m. Opera Time — 
Host: Ruby Mercer. Tonight 
Cosi fan tutte (Mozart) (Kiri 
te Kanawa. Teresa Stratas, 
Frederica von Stade, Jules 
Bastin, Strasbourg Philhar 
monic Orchestra and Rhine 
Opera Chorus conducted by 
Alain Lombard). Guest: Lofti 
Mansouri. 

THURSDAY 

AM Network 

2:94 p.m. Crime Serial — 

“Clouds of Witness", by 
Dorothy L. Sayers, starring 
Ian Carmichael as Lord 
Peter Wimsey, who Investi¬ 
gates a murder of which his 
brother, the Duke of Denver, 
stands accused R.S.V.P. 
(Part I) 

8:94 p.m. Playhouse — 
Corrigan — The Hogtown 
File’’, by Clint Bomphray 
Richard McKenna stars as a 
young crime reporter who. at 
32. struggles to hold on to his 
60s idealism despite the iron¬ 
ic and cynical sensibilities of 
his’70s journalism. Each epi¬ 
sode highlights his travels 
through the streets and boar 
drooms of Toronto and the 
story behind the crime which 
his newspaper, a tabloid 
called The Free Press, head 
lines He Is joined and aided 
in this search by Perry his 
City Editor (Diana LeBlanc) 
and police sergeant Reed 
(Frank Perry). Arson at the 
Church of the New Light Mis 
sion, racial killing in the To¬ 
ronto subway, neo-Naziism 
and the Canadian govern¬ 
ment, corruption In a 
big league hockey club and 
the vicious world of heroin 
addiction are among the 
venues of Corrigan’s relent¬ 
less search for new v 

FM Network 

4:94 p.m. Arts National — 
Host: Karin Wells. First of an 
11 week Thursday series 
highlighting music by 
Czechoslovakian composers 
and centering on the 50th an¬ 
niversary of the death of Leos 
Janaeek. Little-known works 
as well as the more familiar 
are performed by such artists 
as pianist Antonin Kubalek, 
mezzo-soprano Janet Stubbs, 
tenor Glyn Evans aad the 
York Winds, before audi¬ 
ences at the University of 
Toronto. Today: Albert 
Prati, violin; Vera Tar- 
nowsky, violin; Rivka Golani- 
Erdesz. viola; Daniel Domb, 
cello: String Quartet No. 1 
(Janaeek). 

9:94 p.m. Stravinsky: The 
Mind and the Musk — Fifth 
of a 10-part series from the 
U S. National Public Radio. 
Tonight: The French Years 
concerns the most turbulent 


period in Stravinsky’s life. 
Profp*am begins with a dis 
eussion of the most signifi 
cant event of bis personal life 
(the beginning of bis affair 
with Vera de Bosset), and 
continues with examinations 
of his new preoccupation with 
aesthetic questions, his new 
religiosity, his inexplicable 
enthusiasm for the mechani 
cal piano, and finally, the de 
bate which began with Oedi 
pus Rex. concerning the 
unique ways that Stravinsky- 
set Ms texts to music. 


« FRIDAY 

AM Network 

8:84 p.m. Panning for GoM 

— A program of informed 
opinion and discussion about 
interesting books, movies. 
TV and some of the other 
lively arts. With Sam Solecki. 
Assoicate professor of Eng 
lish at SL Michael’s College. 
Toronto, and book review 
editor of The Canadian 
Forum on books, Sheila 
Kieran, writer and broadcas¬ 
ter on film, and a different 
guest critic each week Mod 
orator is Warren Davis. 


8:39 p.m. Ja tz Radio Can¬ 
ada — Part II of Jazz Piano 
Players, based in Edmonton 
Hoot: Tommy Banks presents 
the Charlie Austin Trio. So¬ 
loist Ted Borowiecki and the 
Wayne Feschuk Quartet. 
(Part I of this two-part pre 
sentation was heard August 
11th). 


11:29 p.m. Nightcap —John 
Hammond, a fighter for 
black rights and a pioneer fi»r 
the recognition of jazz as an 
art form, was the first to 
record Count Bask, Bessie 
Smith and Bilik Holiday He 
talks about breaking down 
the race barriers in music in 
the thirties and forties. Also. 

• The Gl«s Key" - Part .V 


FM Network 

9:94 p.m. A Night at the 
Operetta — Host: Otto Low) 
l’Onight: Highlights from The 
White Horse Inn (Ralph Ben 
aizky, Peter Alexander. In- 
geborg fiallsteln, Erika Koth, 
Orchestra conducted by Jo¬ 
hannes Fehring); Zwel Her¬ 
zen im Dreivierteltakt (Two 
Hearts in % time) (Robert 
Stolz)N (Renate Holm, so¬ 
prano; Rudolf Schock. tenor, 
Melitta Muszely, soprano. 
V ienna Volksoper Orchestra, 
conducted by Robert Stolz); 
Operetta “Saison in Sait 
burg" (Fred Ray¬ 
mond /Wa liner- Feltz) (Herta 
Talmar, Renate Holdm. 
Peter Alexander. Franz 
Marszalek, conductor). 


Midnight, That Midnight 
Jazx — Music to become a 
jazz fan by — contemporary 
jazz, featuring interviews 
with jazz artists, with host 
Katie Malloch in Montreal. 


The Calendar 

Places to go, things to do — for the coming 
week in the Victoria area. 

■ (Material for publication should be submitted “ 

to The P revue Calendar, Box 300, Victoria, V8W 
2N4, to arrive not later than Tuesday noon of the 
week preceding the event. Prevue reserves the 
right to accept, reject or edit material.) 

















PACE TWELVE 


Home of the Week 



PLAN N? 76-1385 

: 128 sq.m./m.ca //1385sq ft./pi.ca 
: 15.2 m.// 50f t./pi. 



~*r-—^ 




)%; / . * 

Wide, Country-Style Bungalow 


This three bedr o om, non 
basement bungalow presents 
• low, wide, ranch-style pro 
file and it ideally salted to 
the mediam froatoge lot. The 
heavy cedar shake roof, 
mixed horizontal and rerti 
cal siding, brick veneer and 
chimney, and the beamed ve¬ 
randah and heavily accented 
windows create the mood of a 
western ranch boose of pio¬ 
neer days. 


dining room via snack bar 
counter, and from the family 
room via convenient pocket 
door. The dining room has a 
charming bay window al¬ 
cove, encouraging a decora¬ 
tor’s touch for the interior 
design of the room The Jam 
ily room connects to a rear 
patio via sliding glass doors 
for easy access to outdoor 
dining in fair weather. 


All three bedrooms are po 
sitioned well away from (he 
living room and the family 
room for freedom from dis 
turbance, and all have good 
exposure for excellent natu 
rai light. The master bed 
room hat a three-piece en- 
suite with shower behind a 
pocket door for space-sav¬ 
in* 


The 

porch entry leads into a 
small foyer which opens 
directly left into the cozy and 
convivial living room, which 
features a raised hearth 
fietdstone fireplace aad wide 
picture 


A weU-pUaned U 
kitchen separates fi 


Accessible from both the 
family roam aad the rear of 
the garage is the lauu- 
dry/utility room complex, 
containing the side-by-side 
configuration of washer and 
dryer. The garage access en 
a Wes the establishment of a 
mud room facility, conve 
to tb 


A single enclosed garage, 
with space for the establish 
meat of a workbench, com 
pletes the convenience facili 
fles of this compact but com 
fortable home. 


Plans for design No. 74- 
1385 may be purchased either 
by the single set, or by the 
package. A five-set plaa 
package, including the first 
set, is economically priced at 




TV MAILBAG 




By THOM MEAD 


IIOLLYWOOD-The TV 
Mailbag: 

Q. Whatever happened to 
Michael Cole of the “Mad 
Squad"? I haven’t seen him 
aa televiston far a tong time. 
Has he qnit actiag?-M.M., 
Orwell, Oh la. 

A. Michael Cole is still in¬ 
volved in acting but has been 
unsuccessful so far in obtain 
ing a regular television se¬ 
ries. A few seasons back, he 
was a regular on "Barbary 
Coast" but that series made 
it for only one season before 
being cancelled because of 
poor ratings. Cole is sche¬ 
duled to appear in the televi¬ 
sion min-series "Evening in 
Byzantium," playing the role 
of Danny, a young film¬ 
maker. 


A Although actor turned- 
politician Ronald Reagan 
gained much fame as one of 
the Old Rangers on the series 
that began in 1951, the origi¬ 
nal character was played by 
Stanley Andrews for 12 
years. 


Q. There Is a mototcycle 
commercial currently mak 
lag the rounds where a guy 
comes np to ask a girl drlviag 
a cycle about her bike. Whei 
he gets arond to waatiag to 
ride the motorcycle, another 
man rides up and tells him to 
get his own cycle. I swear 
that is Burt Reynolds. Am I 
right?—B.L., Washington, 
North Carolina. 

A. That is not Burt Reyn¬ 
olds 

Q. I understand Michael 
Ijindon of "Little House on 
the Prairie” has a large fam¬ 
ily la real life. How big is his 
family? S.G., Castro Valley, 
Calif. 

A In real life, Landon has a 
family of seven children, 
ranging in age 28 to 2. 

Q. Here’s a trivia question 
that I can't find an answer to. 
Who was the original Old 
Ranger on the series. "Death 
Valiev Days*’ during athe 
1154s? 


Q. How old was Morris the 

cat wbea be died and whnt 

was the cause of denth? Also, 
who will replace him on tboso 

cat commercials?—I.R., 
East Brunswick. N J. 

A. Morris was 17 years of 
age when he died, which is 
pretty old for a cat. Cause of 
death was associated with 
cardiac complications reiat 
ed to old age. A spokesperson 
for Star Kist Foods, Inc, said 
Morris’ role would be porpe 
tuated by a cat that has 
served as his understudy for 
some time. 


Questions of general inter¬ 
est will be answered in the 
column. Volume of mail pro¬ 
hibits personal replies. In¬ 
quiries should be sent to 
Thom Mead, TV Mailbag, c/o 
Revue, Box 300, Victoria, 
B.C, Y8W 2N4. 


Mfdband TV Programs 


Midband programs, broad 
cast by KCPQ-TV, Tacoma 
(Channel H) can only be seen 
by viewers whose television 
sets have a converter. 


Sunday. September 3 — 4. 

Idea Thing; 4:30, Antiques, 5. 
Movie. Fires on the Plain; 7. 
Evening At Pops; 8. Mas¬ 
terpiece Theatre. Poldark; 9. 
Great Performances; 10:30. 
Wilder. Wilder; II, A Day To 
Remember. 


Wilder. Wilder; 7:30. Dick 
C’avetl; 8. The French Chef. 
8:30 Kirks' Camera; 9. The 
David Susskind Show; li. In 
sight; 11:30, Captioned 
News. 


$140. and an eight set pack 
age. also including the first 
set. Is only $125 
Whichever method you 
^choose, please include $4 for 
postage and handling B C. 
residents add 5% sales tax. 

Send for the current edition 
of Select Home Designs, Se¬ 
ries No. 30, featuring imagi 
native decorating and home 
improvement ideas, plus 350 
quality home plans of every 
type. Available for $2.25 
($1.75 plus 54 cents postage 
and handling) 

To order any of these 
items, please send cheque or 
money order payable to the 
Home of the Week. Address 
to: Home of the Week, c/o 
Victoria Press, 382 W 
Broadway. Vancouver. B.C. 
V5Y IR2. 


Monday. September 4 — 5, 
Sesame Street; 0, Mr. Rogers 
Neighborhood: 8:30. Romag 
noli s Table: 7, 1 Am A Man; 
7 30. Dick Cavett, 8. Once 
Upon A Classic; 9. Opera 
Theatre; 10. Harry S. Tru 
man Plain Speaking: II. 
Consultation: 11:30. Voyage 
to the Ends of the Earth 


Thursday. September 7 - 6. 
Mr. Rogers Neighboring. 
4:30. Antiques: 7. Voyage To 
The Ends of the Earth; 7:30, 
Dick Cavett; 8. Once Upon a 
Classic; 8:30. Eric Hoffer 
The Crowded Life; 10. Mas 
terpiece Theatre; 11, Black 
Perspectives on the News; 
11:30. Captioned News 


Tuesday. September 3 —6. 
Mr Rogers Neighborhood; 
0:30. Over Easy; 7, Who Lives 
Next Door?; 7:30. Dick Ca 
vett; 8. James Michener’s 
World; 0, Antonia: Portrait of 
a Woman: 10, Great Perfor 
mances; 11. Lowell Thomas 
Remembers; 11:30, Cap- 
Mooed New* , 


Last ; 


•st year arm 
writer Collect McC 
Thorn Birds. Dubl 
Wind’’, The Thorn 
the best seller lists 


This year. It’s 
time. And Ills liU 
retail and private; 
tobies, coffee table 
ing this phenomena 
year’s review migh 
review of an Austri 
supposed to be a 
something about tb 
out the internation 
phenomena are a 
occur. 


If you want to 
family’s history is s 
in a nutshell is that 
as attractive and fl 
no sexual conseque 
McCullough has e: 
female fantasy. Lit 
is no doubt shrugg 


Q. I was told recently by a 
good friend that Perry Como 
and Dean Martin are broth 
ers. Can this be true?—E.I., 
Victoria, B.C. 

A. They are not brothers 


Q. Years ago, James Gar¬ 
ner alternated with another 
actor in a series called "Mat 
erick.” Wasn’t this other fel¬ 
low Robert Conrad of the 
current series "Black Sheep 
Squadron?”—A.O., Chaps 
ville, Penn. 

A. The role of Bari was 
played by actor Jack Kelly. 
In addition, fo( a few seasons 
Roger Moore played cousin 
Beau. 


(Before The 1 
herself as "an oh 
pictured the futur 
somewhere” and d< 
Avon Books picking 
for a cool $1.9 mil 
should now be guar 


The Thom Bin 
probably worth the i 
with a rainy weekei 
ing and her story fi 


The Thom Bin 
history; there s a 
Minister Robert M 
example, as well as 
1965. There’s also a 
the patriarch of the 
heroine with the f 




The 


It may not be written, 
think it is understood, I 
book reviewer should t 
jective. If this be so, t 
had better apologize n 
can no more be obje 
about Tony Angell's Ra 
Crows, Magpies and . 
than I can about the i 
ories ft evokes. Then 
few pages in this remar 
book when. throu£t An 
accounts of his expert 
with the birds that ar 
subject, I was not taken 
to those golden days of y 
those great days bf d 
very, when the cares a 
were far away — and on 
shoulders. Let one pa< 
Illustrate: 


ly, September 6 
— 6. Mr. Rogers Neighbor 
hood; 4:34, Antiques. 7. 


Friday . September 8 — 4. 
Mr. Rogers Neighborhood, 
6:30, Over Easy; 7. Eco¬ 
nomically Speaking; 7:30, 
Dick Cavett; 8, Washington 
Week in Review; 8:30. Wall 
Street Week; 9, Evening at 
Pops; 10, Hlghschool Foot¬ 
ball: 11, Over Easy; 11:30, 
Captioned News. 

i 

Saturday. September • — 
4, Movie. Fame is the Spur; 4. 
Once Upon a Classic; 4:30, 
Wall Street Week; 7, Black 
Perspective on the News; 
7:30, Lowell Thomas Re¬ 
members; 8. Great Perfor 
mances; 0, A Good Disso 
nance Like A Man; 10, Anton 
to: Portrait of a Woman; 11, 
Big Time WrestHng; 


"Before the coastal n 
tains around Los Anj 
were flattened for home 
punctured for roadw 
there were still places 
youngsters could hike U 
wrap up in the solitude 
adventure there. Paii 
scrub jays came to sco 
as we set up our cam 
remember awakening 
mornings to the faint fe 
of being watched and, 
looking up, I usually fot 
lay, head cocked over, 
ing me full in the face. I < 
home with such mem< 
along with the usual 
dose of poison oak.' 


Angell’s hills of 
Lngeles are my oak woo 
Manitoba; his scrub jays 
blue jays; and his pnisor 
ny poison ivy — othei 
mr memories are the sa 


A. 
















































FAG€ THIRTEf N 


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borhood, 

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shington 
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y; 1130. 


•st yea 

writer Colleen McCullough’s much ballyhooed opus. The 
Thorn Birds. Dubbed ‘ The Australian Gone With the 
Wind”, The Thorn Birds in its hardcover edition topped 
the best seller lists for months. 

This year, it’s available in paperback for the first 
time. And ills literally everywhere. On bookshelves, 
retail and private; on buses, planes and trains; on hall 
tables, coffee tables and night tables and so on. Ponder¬ 
ing this phenomenon, I concluded that a re-nm of last 
year’s review might be in order. Please don’t ask what a 
review of an Australian novel is doing in a column that is 
supposed to be about Canadian books. There’s just 
something about the annual summer hiatus which brings 
out the internationalist in me. And anyway, publishing 
phenomena are always interesting, wherever they 


Pat 

Barclay 


If you want to know why a 700-page chronicle of a 
family’s history is such a resounding success, the answer 
in a nutshell is that it contains a heroine who is free to be 
as attractive and flirtatious as she chooses with little or 
no sexual consequences. Wittingly or otherwise, Colleen 
McCullough has expoited what is obviously a popular 
female fantasy. Literature, it ain’t, but Miss McCullough 
is no doubt shrugging her shoulders all the way to the 
bank. 

(Before The Thom Birds, McCullough described 
herself as “an old maid making $8,000 a year who 
pictured the future at age 70 in a cold water flat 
somewhere” and decided to do something about it. With 
Avon Books picking up the paperback rights to her novel 
for a cool $1.0 million, a lifetime supply of hot water 
should now be guaranteed.) 

The Thom Birds is no Gone With the Wind, but it’s 
probably worth the trouble if you’re wondering what to do 
with a rainy weekend. 1 found hercharacters unconvinc¬ 
ing and her story far-fetched, but I wasn't bored. 

The Thorn Birds makes a stab or two at passing 
history; there s a call to arms by Australian Prime 
Minister Robert Menzies and a scene at Tobruk, for 
example, as well as reference to the Greek revolution in 
1985. There's also a disastrous bush fire in which Paddy, 
the patriarch of the Cleary family, is roasted alive, and a 
heroine with the face of an angel and a will like a 



McCULLOUGH . ..m wonder she’s laughing 


seven-foot crowbar. But any resemblence to Margaret 
MJtcheirs famous epic ends there. As a novelist. McCul 
tough has more in common with those pseudononymous 
Harlequin ladies and Ethel M. Dell. 

The Cleary story begins to 1915 when Meggie, McCul 
lough's heroine, is four. Their poverty-stricken New 
Zealand existence is interrupted for good when Paddy’s 
wealthy sister hwites them to make the move to her 
Australian ranch, which they will work for ber and later 
inherit - 

* There they meet Father Ralph de Bricassart, a 
superlatively “beautiful” priest who takes a shine to 
Meggieand gets to the way of the inheritance to hoot The 
rest of the tale describes what happens when Meggie 
grows up (as if all you Harlequin fans out there haven’t 
already guessed) and what becomes at her children (She 
has two of them, not without difficulty ) 

What makes aO this nonsense readable is McCul¬ 
lough’s genuine talent for description. ‘Three spare axes 
were lying nearby,” she will write, “for eucalyptus wood 
blunted the sharpest axe in no time at all.” Or “The 
foliage grew so close to the ground that sheep could reach 

it easily, the result being that every wilga bottom was 
mown as straight as a topiary hedge ” Even the most 
preposterous of characters comes alive when set against 
a background as vivid as this. 

But the most interesting aspect oLTbe Thor n Birds Is 
its theme of sexual denial. Everybody practises it, except 
the Cleary parents, who could hardly have been expected , 
to as K was their job to produce most of the other 
characters. Father Ralph succumbs to Meggie about 
once every 25 years; her seven brothers are celibates; ber 
husband is o latent homosexual, and her children have 
Other Things on their mind. 

Why, one wonders. Is McCullough getting even with 
men? Are Australian droughts really that bad*’ Whatever 
the explanation. The Thom Birds can best be categorized 
as a story about a time and place where men are men and 
women are women and never the twain shall meet Well, 
hardly ever. 


THE THORN BODS, by Coffees WcOritongh. Ar 
$2.59. 






The Corvid World 


- 


ber 9 - 
t Spur;«, 
tic; 9:29. 
7, Black 
f News; 
las Re 
Perfor 
i Disso 
I, Anton 
man; II, 


It may not be w ritten, but I 
think it is understood, that a 
book reviewer should be ob¬ 
jective. If this be so, then I 
had better apologize now; 1 
can no more be objective 
about Tony Angell’s Ravens, 
Crows, Magpies and Jays 
than I can about the mem 
ories it evokes. There are 
few pages in this remarkable 
book when. throu£i Angell’s 
accounts of his experiences 
with the birds that are his 
subject, I was not taken back 
to those golden days of youth, 
those great days bf disco¬ 
very, when the cares of life 
were far aw ay — and on other 
shoulders. Let one passage 
Illustrate: 

“Before the coastal moun¬ 
tains around Los Angeles 
were flattened for homes and 
punctured for roadways, 
there were still places that 
youngsters could hike to and 
wrap up in the solitude and 
adventure there. Pairs of 
scrub jays came to scold us 
as we set up our camps. I 
remember awakening those 
mornings to the faint feeling 
of being watched and, upon 
4 v looking up, 1 usually found a 

* lav hpaH rnrbpH mor ctar 


(ay, head cocked over, star¬ 
ing me full in the face. I came 
home with such memories 
ilong with the usual good 
dose of poison oak.’ 

Angell’s hills of Los 
Angeles are my oak woods of 
Manitoba; his scrub jays, my 
ilue jays; and his poison oak 
ny poison ivy — otherwise 
Hir memories are the same. 


By HAROLD HOSFORD 

But Ravens. Crows, Mag 
pies and Jays is more than a 
book of memories; it h an 
account — a very personal 
account, to be sure — of a 
remarkable group of bfrds. 
More than that, it is an ar¬ 
tist’s account, for Tony 
Angell is first an artist — as 
an earlier book. Owls, re¬ 
vealed— and Ravens, Crows, 
Magpies and Jays K the vehi¬ 
cle for his artistic efforts. 

Choosing to work only in 
black and white (Owls was in 
full color) Angell, with an 
artist's eye for posture and 
expression, has brought per 
sonality and vigor to his sub¬ 
jects. On page after page his 
birds explode into life. They 
are never static, as ravens, 
crows, magpies, and jays are 
never static. They are always 
impish, mischievous, con¬ 
triving — as ravens, crows, 
magpies and jays are always 
impish, mischievous, and 
contriving. And they reveal 
the family for what it is, a 
group of beautiful and re¬ 
markably intelligent birds. 

The corvids, to Anglicize 
“Corvidae” — the Latin 
name for the family of 
ravens, crows, magpies and 
jav^s — are known throughout 


RAVENS , CROWS, MAG¬ 
PIES AND JAYS , by 
Tony Angell. Douglas 
and McIntyre. $19.95. 


the world. The raven, which 
epitomizes the corvids, may 
be the most cosmopolitan of 
all birds. There are more 
than a hundred species 
known. Angell deals with the 
18 “that occur within the 
United Stales,” which, since 
Hawaii is now one of these, 
includes the Alala or Hawai 
ian Crow. Unfortunately, to 
birdwatchers of the north 
west coast — and to bird lis¬ 
ters throughout the country 
— Angell has chosen to lump 
our beloved little Northwest 
ern Crow with the Common 
Crow of the interior. It is a 
decision that he will be 
brought to account for, 1 am 
sure. 

In addition to an essay on 
each species, Angell also ex¬ 
plores the peculiar adapta 
lions — both social and physi¬ 
cal — that have roaae the 
corv ids so successful in their 
exploitation of often hostile 
environments and the chang 
ing attitudes of man. 

Angell describes bow, first 
held in respect and awe by 
primitive man as manifesta 
lions of the mystical forces 
that shaped his life, members 
of the corvids later survived 
the unrelenting onslaught of 
another kind of man who saw 
in their hated black forms a 
threat to his existence, to now 
embark on a new phase of 
their relations with humans, 
a phase in which they are 
recognized for what they an*, 
interesting and exciting ex¬ 
periments in evolution. 


San Bias of Mexico jays drawn by Tony Angell 















RAGE FOURTEEN 




* * *** 


By E. UHR 


YORKSHIRE—“All right then, meet 
me Wednesday, do it had better be 
Tuesday, in the bar of the Five Casks 
.Hotel. The big one on the comer of the 
^marketplace, not the little one by the 
river. At 12:31. Goodbye?*’ 


“Wait. Don’t hang up. What town*” 


“Oh yes. The town of — 


It was a furtive business and getting 
more furtive by the minute, this meet 
ing with a man whose name and where¬ 
abouts are a carefully guarded secret. It 
was not a ransom dropoff. Nor was it a 
contact between secret agents. It wasn't 
even a news leak. It was an appoint¬ 
ment with the world's most popular 
veterinarian, James Herriot. 


Herriot is the pseudonym of the 
author whose bestselling books. All 
Things Wise and Wonderful — 27 out of 
the last 29 weeks on the bestseller list 
eight of them hi first place — make the 
hard work, long hours and frustrations 
of a rural veterinarian sound like a 
continous Idyll. Herriot’s compassion 
for his animal patients, whom he treats 
not as so much livestock but as Individ¬ 
uals with distinct personalities, is ex 
? ceeded only by bis compassion for his 


own species and delight in its vagaries 


His Yorkshire Is peopled with a 
Dickensian collection of characters 
There are his partner, the competent, 
highrainded, and quixotic Siegfried, and 
his playboy brother, Tristan. There 
are the overpowering Miss Harbottle, 
the sadistic and lecherous Angus Grier. 
Mrs. Pumphrey, who carries anthropo¬ 
morphism to the extreme of sending 
sherry and brandy to her convalescing 
Pekingese, a caprice with obvious 
benefits for the veterinarian. There is 
Mallock, the local “knacker,” whose 
business it is to dispose of unmarketable 
carcasses, and whose own children play 
in carrioq as contendedly as other 
people’s children build sandcastles. 
There are the farmers: always an 
eccentric, hardworking breed, some 
tightfisted and unscrupulous, others 
generous when they barely have enough 
for themselves, often courageous, occa¬ 
sionally vicious, usually critical, im¬ 
bued with folk wisdom and absurd 
superstition. 


And there is Herriot himself, wrest¬ 
ing amusement from his own mistakes 
and misdiagnoses: his bungled court¬ 
ship; the cow that he was certain had a 
broken pelvis and would never get up 
again, who proceeded to prove him 
wrong and haunt him for years, demon¬ 
strating that whereas doctors bun their 
mistakes, veterinarians are dogged — if 
not cowed — by theirs; and the pet 
parakeet that died of fright in his hand 
(and for whom he quickly and quietly 
substituted another). He describes his 
triumphs too: the births, the cures, the 
inexplicable miracles. 


It hadn’t been easy to get his phone 
number, and It wasn’t easy to get to 
him. In fact when I finally stepped off 
the train. I was pretty sure I was in the 
wrong place. The platform was. in the 
middle of nowhere; there was no town 
anywhere around. I thought of loitering 
around a phone, waiting for It to ring 
and a muffled voice to direct me else¬ 
where. but I couldn’t find a phone. 
There was a ladies’ room, but its in¬ 
terior at first only increased my appre¬ 
hension. It couldn’t be real; It had to be 
part of a Victorian ghost town. It was a 
huge room with a cold marble fronted 
fireplace, straight chairs and a dining 
table covered by a purple plush cloth — 
all wrapped in layers of dust. And nr 
plumbing. Then, behind a door, I found 
two sure signs of the 20th century: a long 
and explicit WARNING about the dan 
gers of venereal disease — and a pay 
toilet. 



BOOKS 


Herriot and friend In rare moment of repose 




Tracking Down 
The Busy Vet 
In His Surgery 


With renewed hope I banged at the 
* TICKETS AND INFORMATION win 


dow, and eventually a face became 
vaguely visible on the other side of the 
grimy glass. “Is there a town anywhere 
around here?’’ 


“That way,” he pointed. Exactly as 
Herriot bad described it: the austere 
brick buildings, snowdrops blooming 
everywhepe, the wide cobblestone mar¬ 
ketplace. There were even two hotels 
called “The Five Casks.” (That in a tiny 
community with scarcely two hotels 
both should have the same name didn't 
surprise me in the least. I had been in 
this country long enough to learn that 
when the English find a name they like, 
they stick with it. I had already spent a 
day in Hampstead hunting for a Frognal 
address on Frognal Close, Frognal Wap, 
Frognal Court, Frognal Gardens, Frog 
nai Lane, and Frognal Rise.) So I went 
Into the bar of the Five Casks Hotel at 
the corner of the marketplace and 
waited. And he appeared. 


To use the other side of ihe hunting 
metaphor, he's a sitting duck. Most 
celebrities can escape a tdb-clamorouM 
public by taking a villa on the Riviera or 
moving to a country estate surrounded 
by an electrified fence. But Herriot's 
life's work is caring for the animals in 
and around the town where he lives. He 
has office hours twice a day. “They 
come In hundreds to the surgery, snap¬ 
ping their pictures. But it’s not a show, 
not an exhibition. It’s a room full of sick 
animals and their worried owners. 
Naturally, some people get annoyed. 
And it’s exhausting having the flash 
bulbs flashing. And embarrassing And 
they don’t Just taketpictures; they want 
to visit, to spend the day with me 


“They are paying me a great compli¬ 
ment, I quite realize that. At the same 
time it is putting a tremendous strain on 
me. I’m very busy. I used to work seven 
days a week. For the past year I’ve only 
worked six, but of course I work at night 
too. Sometimes all night.” 


There I was. face to face with the 
elusive James Herriot. What a triumph! 
Well, not quite. Tourists pour in torrents 
through his “surgery ” (clinic). In fact I 
appear to be the only person w ho’s ever 
had trouble finding him. He’s become 
one of the stops oa the Grand Tour now, 
along with the Tower of London and 
Winchester Cathedral. No doubt he’ll be 
listed in the next edition of the Blue 
Guide. M ... An alternative route from 
London to Edinburgh passes through 
the 18th-century market town of—. Well 
worth the visit to see the surgery of 
James Herriot. No admission fee 
Closed Sundays . .” 


“The writing has dwindled away. 
I’m bombarded with thousands of let¬ 
ters and books. I don’t have time to read 
the books. To some people I send form 
replies. But others must be answered 
personaily, so when I get a few minutes 
to spare I write letters ” 


He said with a wan smile, “My 
cover's been blown.” •• * 


He was sandwiching in this Inters lew 
during his lunch hour. We had moved to 
the hotel restaurant — quieter than the 
bar — and he chatted with the over¬ 
worked waitress about how it felt to be 
rushed, drank a pint of bitter, and put 
away a cheese omelet and “a bit of 
turnip." He was dressed in his “working 
clothes a beige cardigan sweater with 
sagging pockets, brown baggy pants, 
and a nondescript shirt and tie. His gray 


and white hair straggled down his neck 
and under his collar. He obviously didn’t 
take time for haircuts. He had a kindly 
. roundish face with gentle features and 
the ruddy, silk complexion that people 
on this island get when they spend time 
outdoors — skin without blemishes, 
seemingly without pores. It was un 
canny the way he looked, acted, was the 
character of his books Only the name 


» had been changed. He said: “I used my 


life as a framework for telling 
stories." 


He came to writing relatively late, 
and for the simple reason that he had a 
lot of good stories to tell. “Amusing 
things happen with animals. I talked 
about writing a book for years and 
years. Then one day my wife said. 
‘You’ll never write a book.’ I said, ‘What 
do you mean?’ She said. We’ve been 
married for 25 years. You’re 50 years 
old. People don’t suddenly start to write 
a book at the age qf 50.* That rather 
settled it. I got down to it. I wrote while 
watching television at night If I'd gone 
off In a room alone to write. I should 
never have seen my family. I wrote in 
among them for 15 minutes or a half 
hour at a time. I've never written more 
than an hour at a time in my life. The 
sweat is getting it down in the first 
place. Working over it is the part I 
like” 


Before he became a writer, he was a 
reader. “I’m a great reader. I read 
everything. Especially Americans. 
Hemingway, Fitzgerald, Salinger, Budd 
Schulberg. I like Huxley. Conan Doyle. I 
read historical biographies. Richard Al¬ 
dington, and histories. Nothing is better 
than a well-written history'. But now I 
don’t have time. I can only read in 
bed ” 


He has no shortage of things to say: 
“So far I’ve only written about the oid 
black magic days; when I first quali¬ 
fied. All the funny old cures. After the 
war everything changed, with the new 
drugs — antibiotics, steroids — and the 
new treatments and operations. Quite a 
fascinating change in vet practices. The 
cesareans. Doctors bring their patients 
to the hospital for complicated surgery, 
but the vet has to do it in the barn or in 
the fields. And I have some funny tales 
about artificial insemination. That’s 
relatively new. It used to be that any old 
bull would do, to keep the cows produc¬ 
ing milk. Nobody thought about increas¬ 
ing the quality of the livestock. You 
know artificial insemination here is 
handled by a government agency — the 
Milk Marketing Board. That’s why the 
farmers call the man who comes around 
‘The Bull in the Bowler.’ 


“My books have information in 
them. People can enjoy them and learn 
a bit, too, about animals.” 


No one would dispute that he knows 
his subject inside and out. In fact many 
of his most graphic descriptions are of 
insides coming out: billowing and seep¬ 
ing and exploding from a variety of 
natural and surgical orifices. He doesn't 
shy away from accurate names and 
clirtical details. Toxemia, dysentery, 
milk fever, eversion of the uterus, pro¬ 
lapsed uterus, distemper, hematomas, 
papillomas. lipomas, lymphosarcomas, 
carcinomas, epilepsy, pyloric stenosis, 
pyrometritis, urticaria are practically 
household words when he’s finished 
with them. With a proper index his book 
could sene as a “Dr. Spock” for animal 
owners, alerting them to symptoms that 
can be treated casually and symptoms 
that require immediate attention This 
approach enables Herriot to avoid the 
bete noire of animal story’ writers sen 
timentality. “I treat them from a vet’s 
viewpoint, with a desire to help the 
animal, to cure it. not to look on it with a 
sentimental eye.” 


So many 
I think abc 
Ing the Gn 
that I feel 
to it. I’d b 
Although I 
Board, my 
man Is the I 
his public s 
opinions of t 
aay shou d I 
concerned, I 
ual. 


The earn 
urgent need 
from its bop 
Yates and l 
commodious 
Gothic struc 
small collect 
and the ili-de 
deplorable U 
disregard of 


A few st 
1951 the po| 
has increase 
by 326 per ce 

ued by 4«5 | 
reference de 
per cent. So 
56 per cent a 
public and se 
of requireme 


No one i; 
surely the c 
bia ought a 
library facil 
em Canadiai 
are way be! 
cities boast 
average .45 
have less tha 
feet per capit 


But the m 
Use of the Gt 

system is the 
with mare th 
cities within I 
to 350,600 our 
anywhere ex 
has the lowes 


Statistics, 



He was, bi his 
“a bone-seeking 
anthropological 
palaentolog st bj 
by temperament 
curious deKer ii 
abysses of histc 
history. But he 
than merely th 
above all else f 
visionary: one < 
gifted breed wh< 
somehow peneti 
the prosaical 
facade of the mui 
through to the 
Powers that pul; 
And he was in ad< 
er: a word wield* 
nary, graced wi 
clous capacity t 
most private vis 
whole waiting i 
fellow mortals. 


Washington Pos» 




When Loren Ei 
July of 1977, amc 
inents of himself 
behind was a n 
selection of his cr 
among his writ! 
and arranged a* 
his own plan, 
slightly ampiifta 
dltion of a few 
pieces, this self 
literary meraorh 
published under t 


) 

















FACE FIFTEEN 


So many people have asked me what 
I think about the current fuss concern¬ 
ing the Greater Victoria Public Library 
that I feel Justified in devating a column 
to It. I’d best start with a disclaimer. 
Although I am a member of the Library 
Board, my views are my own. The chair¬ 
man is the board’s official spokesman and 
his public statements represent majority 
opinions of the board. Thus, what I have to 
say should be read as the opinion of one 
concerned, kpledgeable, private indlvid- 

The current hullabaloo stems from the 
urgent need of the central library to move 
from its hopelessly inadequate premises at 
Yates and Blanshard to somewhere more 
commodious. The original 1904 Carnegie 
Gothic structure was designed to house a 
small collection to serve a small population, 
and the il:-designed 1951 extension showed a 
deplorable lack of Imagination and a total 
disregard of functional and future needs. 

A few statistics tell the story. Since 
1951 the population of Greater Victoria 
has increased by 95 per cent, book usage 
by 326 per cent, number of volumes catalog¬ 
ued by 445 per cent, and questions to the 
reference department by a whopping 1,628 
per cent. So cramped is the place that only 
56 per cent of total space is available to the 
public and seating space Is a mere one-third 
of requirements. 

No one is baying for the moon, but 
surely the capital city of British Colum¬ 
bia ought at least to match the public 
library facilities available in other west¬ 
ern Canadian cities. As things stand we 
are way behind. Six western Canadian 
cities boast libraries with space of an 
average .45 square feet per capita. We 
have less than half, a miserable .21 square 
feet per capita. 

But the most telling statistics are these: 
Use of the Greater Victoria Public Library 
system is the highest in Canids tor cities 
with more than 100,000 population. And for 
cities within the population range of 125,600 
to 350.600 our per capita costs are lower than 
anywhere except the city of York, which 
has the lowest usage rate of all. 

Statistics, however impressive and com- 


E. D. WARD-HARRIS 

One man's solution 
To the library problem 


pelllng, tell only part of the story One has to 
spend some time behind the scenes to grasp 
the full horror of the situation. Clerks are 
forced to work at small desks In ill lit pas¬ 
sages behind book stacks. Highly skilled 
librarians lack quiet places to concentrate 
and are further frustrated by seeing their 
Ideas for displays, activities, and greater 
efficiency still-born though lack of space. 
Toilet facilities are as absolute disgrace. 
Space for serious research la nan-existent. 
One could go on and on. 

The Library Board (which, incidentally, 
through lack of space has to hold meetings in 
the Capital Regional District offices on 
Yates), is an advisory body; all major deci¬ 
sions concerning the library are made, quite 
rightly, by the mayors and aldermen of the 
four core municipalities, who hold the 
purse-strings. They are all aware of the 
situation and are fully agreed that some¬ 
thing must be done. The trouble ts they 
cannot agree what that ‘something* should 


The proposal recently placed before the 
councils by the Library Board is that 
the central library be moved to rented 
space in the new provincial government 
building on Broughton Street. Thanks to 
special financial arrangements the rent 
is reasonable and there is a ten-year lease 
with renewal options. With ample library 
and parking space available, the proposition 
is, on the face of it, an attractive one. 

As you know, the proposal was pre¬ 
sented to each council in turn. The four 
mayors supported it wholeheartedly, but 
it met strong aidermanic opposition in 
Oak Bay, Victoria and, to a lesser ex¬ 
tent, Saanich. Esquimalt council, however, 
turned down the proposition, despite a well 
reasoned appeal by Mayor Art Young. The 
decision has to be unanimous, so for the 


moment the matter rests there and unless at 
least one Esquimalt alderman reverses his 
decision at a subsequent meeting we have a 
stalemate. 


The meetings, all of which I attend 
ed, were not distinguished by scintillat¬ 
ing debate, and It seemed to me that 
some of the dissenting aldermen had made 
up their minds In advance and had no wish (o 
be confused by facts, even elementary facts 
known to most of the 55,000 or so people who 
use the central library every month. 

This strengthened rumors that some 
aldermen voted in conformity with a politi¬ 
cal party line, and if this is so one can only 
deplore the fact that the library has become 
a political football. 

Meanwhile, what can be done? There 
are logical reasons why simplistic solu¬ 
tions are unfeasible. Expgnsion on the 
present site is Impossible; the creation 
of more branch libraries would place an 
added burden on the central library, which 
services them. And so on. However, there !s 
a solution — a two-phase solution — and this 
we should adopt. 

Personally (and 1 again stress that I 
am speaking only for myself), I feel we 
must move the central library to Broughton 
Street immediately, but that location should 
be regarded as temporary lodging for only 
ten years — ample time for a brand new 
centrally-located library building to be con¬ 
structed. 

A new building should have been con¬ 
structed years ago. but it wasn’t, so we must 
now pay for our folly by spending money on 
rent, which Is money down the drain. The 
thing is, we must make the decision to build 
now; further procrastination will merely 
prolong the agony and permit some politi¬ 


cians to turn sore-pressed taxpayers against 
an innocent victim: the library This must 
not be allowed to happen. 

1 have It on the best possible author 
My that an Ideal site, owned by the City 
of Victoria, is available, and there Is no 
reason why planning should not commence 
without further defcny. But, I assure you. M 
will not unless libnry-users, the great silent * 
majority, make their wishes known, for 
politicians rarely Initiate; they respond to 
public clamor. 

We have recreation centres, with and 
without Ice; we have theatres and golf 
links and a municipally-owned covered tew 
nis complex and soon will have a giant 
bird-cage In the form of a renovated Crystal 
Gardens. Fine. But life should not consist 
wholly of froth and bubble, there must also 
be something for the mind, and what better 
than a fine public library which, never let It 
be forgotten, b an extension of the edoca 
tional system. * 

Schools, which cost us so much, should 
teach the young bow to learn; public li¬ 
braries serve as treasure houses of knowl¬ 
edge for those unable to proceed to univer¬ 
sity but never cease tp want Intellectual 
stimulation, whether for practical purposes 
or for the sheer Joy at learning. I am think¬ 
ing chiefly of books, but audio-visual depart¬ 
ments also play a vital role. 

Greater Victoria Is one of the most 
literate regions In the country. Unfortunate 
ly, bookish people-if* less vociferous than 
the athletic crowd and politicians respond to 
noise and are apt to misinterpret silence as 
assent. So, make a noise. Write letters to 
editors. Pester politicians. And continue to 
make a noise until action b taken. 

You may be told, as I have been toM. 
(hat we cannot afford to build a new 
public library, and figures will be pro¬ 
duced to prove this. Rubbish We cannot I 
afford not to build. Delay has already I 
Increased costs and further delay of the 
inevitable will merely add to the bur 
den. It b simply a question of revising 
priorities and it Is up to us library-using 
taxpayers to see to it that a new library 
building takes precedence over everything 
efce. Go to ft! Get involved! 


A Journey into Realm of Abiding Mystery 


By JULIAN REID 

He was. In his own words, 


"a bone-seeking man” — an 
anthropologically-oriented 
palaentologkt by profession, 
by temperament an eternally 
curious deker into the dark 
abysses of history and pre¬ 
history. But he was more 
than merely that. He was 
above all else from birth a 
visionary: one of that rare 
gifted breed whose eyes can 
somehow penetrate beyond 
the prosaically shabby 
facade of the mundane world, 
through to the archetypal 
Powers that pulse behind it. 
And he was in addition a writ¬ 
er: a w ord wielder extraordi¬ 
nary, graced with that pre¬ 
cious capacity to share his 
most private visions with a 
whole waiting world of his 
fellow mortals. 

W hen Loren Eiseley died in 
July of 1977, among the frag¬ 
ments of himself that he left 
behind was a retrospective 
selection of his own favorites 
among his writings, chosen 
and arranged according to 
his own plan. And now, 
slightly amplified by the ad¬ 
dition of a few posthumous 
pieces, this self-structured 
literary memorial has been 
published under the title The 


Star Thrower — a Substantial 
volume containing no fewer 
than 21 essays (12 of them 
hitherto uncollected), along 
with two never-before-pub¬ 
lished short stories, a flimsy 
sheaf of youthful poems, and 
by way of introduction to the 
whole assemblage a charac¬ 
teristically elegant and inci¬ 
sive tribute by the late W. H. 
Auden, reprinted from a 1970 
Issue of The Sew Yorker. 

The result, for anyone not 
previously acquainted with 
Eiseley’s writings, should 
prove richly rewarding — an 
exhilarating initiation Into 
the world of one of the most 
eloquently evocative nature- 
essayists of our time. The 
confirmed Eiseley enthusi¬ 
ast, however, may find it a 
trifle disappointing — for the 
simple reason that almost all 
of the finest entries here are 
already familiar to him from 
earlier collections, five of 
them being reprinted from 
The Unexpected Universe, 
three from The Immense 
Journey , and one from The 
Firmament of Time. As for 
the hitherto-uncollected 
pieces, they are mostly rela 
tively minor Eiseley. Which 
Is to say that by ordinary 



EISELEY 

... literary memorial 


standards they are very fine 
indeed, but fall just a hatr’s- 
breadth short of being super- 
nally so. 

For one thing, Eiseley the 
poet Is done small justice 
here, since the 10 early pieces 
included (dating from 1930 
through 1943) are all la a very 
minor key, pleasant but 
somewhat watery, like rain- 
pool reflections of the lyrics 
of Robert Frost. But more 
significant, i think, is a cer¬ 
tain (perhaps forglveable) 
bias in the selection of essays 
that Eiseley the prose-poet 
has chosen to include. 

It is perfectly understand¬ 
able that the author, as a 


much-honored educator and 
academic administrator, 
should consecrete a good half 
of his text to discussions of 
the pressing issues he groups 
together under the omnibus 
bead “Science and Human¬ 
ism** — and there can be «o 
question that his observa 
tions on these matters are at 
once eloquent and timely. 

But nevertheless, the fact 
remains that, apart from the 
three superb pieces that open 
and conclude the section, the 
contributions here are mea 
sured, scholarly, and rela 
tively impersonal. They 
might Just as well be the work 
of some other inspired but 
relatively orthodox humanist 

— a Lewis Mumford, say, or 
a Herbert J. Muller. And 
while this is high praise in its 
way, one finds oneself yearn¬ 
ing for the unique Eiseley 
touch. 

From that, one must turn 
Instead to the section headed 
“Nature and Autobiography” 

— two topics which, for Eise¬ 
ley, are interfused and to ail 
Intents and purposes synony 
mous. After all, as he himself 
observed in a characteristi¬ 
cally electrifying phrase. 
“One does not meet oneself 
until one catches the reflec¬ 


tion from an eye other than 
human.” 


As he undergoes his world- 
shaking encounters with such 
‘ hidden teachers” of the uni¬ 
versal wisdom as spiders, 
squirrels, and the fossilized 
skulls of our half-human fore¬ 
fathers, Eiseley is time and 
again seized by that “hair 
raising chill” which he aptly 
compares to the trembling 
that seized Job when a vast 
anonymous Voice boomed 
forth from the Whirlwind. He 
finds himself ail of a sudden 
plunged headlong into a 
world of archetypal numino- 
sity and dream like Intensi¬ 
ties, a realm that b positively 
fraught with the immanent 
presence of the Miraculous. 
And ail this even though, as a 
trained scientist, he is cer¬ 
tainly no stranger to what he 
at one point characterizes as 
“the despair once alluded to 
as the utterly hopeless fear 
confined to moderns — that 
no miracles can ever hap¬ 
pen.** 


In Loren Eiseley*! world, 
however, they not only can 
happen but continuity do — 
largely became Eiseley. un¬ 
like most of if, has conscien 
tiously re tr^ned himself in 
that once-uflversal faculty 
that is still the prerogative of 
children everywhere, the gift 
of seeing things “from an in¬ 
verted angle,” as he puts it, 
and thereby catching the 
occasional oblique glimpse 
Into the vast, pulsing heart of 
that transcendental Beyond 
“out of which all miracles 
emerge, and which, once de¬ 
fined, ceases to satisfy the 
human need for symbols.** 


This b a realm of abiding 
mystery 4>to which today all 
too few scientists (and all too 
few self-professed artists, foi 
that matter) are brave 
enough to venture. But M is 
Loren Eiseley*s spirtual 
homeland — that shadowy 
Night Country of myth and 
marvel with whose rever¬ 
berating distance be seems 
primordially at one. 


THE STAR THROWER, by Lana Eiseley. FMzbenry 
and Whiteside. $16.66. 













/ 




I 


/ 



• i 










Looking at Stars 


Does «rt follow life? Doe* 
life follow art? Maybe it * 
either .or neither. Any¬ 
how. the television script 
writers were "acting affir¬ 
matively*’ and consistently 
coming up with prestigious 
careers for female charac 
ters. A series proposed for 
(he future would cast Brenda 
Vaccare as a brain surgeon. 
Women lawyers will be an 
abundant breed with Barbara 
Parkins leading the list as a 
specialist In malpractice 
cases In the mini-series, "The 
Critical List.” If* due on 
NBC in the fall. 

Perpetually bloodthirsty 
Dracula is proving half a 
dozen times over this year 
that a scary legend is hard to 
kill off. The Bela Lngosi 
movie re runs from the 1930* 
have long elicited guffaws 
from loyal cults. But It was 
Prank Laagella's Broadway 
performance In "Dracula,” 
that transformed every¬ 
body’s favorite vampire from 
a heavy into a misunderstood 
romantic The word is that 
Langella will star in a movie 
adaptation of the play Mean¬ 
while. George Hamilton is 
stopping traffic in New York 
filming an even farther-out 
Dracula spoof called "Love 
at First Bite.” An off-Broad- 
way production. "The Pas¬ 
sion of' Dracula.” has been 
doing swell. Leal* Jordan did 
a \ ersion on PBS-TV and 
"Count Dracula,” keeps pop 
ping up on the straw hat 


improved Now she’s off to 
California to do good work 
thera raising scholarship 
funds for U.S. kids who need 
special help That takes the 
form of a benefit perfor 
mance (again, natch, gala* 
at the L A. premier of 
"Annie ” Cyd Ckarisse and 
Tony Martin are co chairing 
this one. lncidently, they flew 
over to Cannes to guest at 
Grace's July bash. Nice to 
have chums who are talented 
and famous .. as well as 
good-hearted. 

Was it common sense that 
told Virginia Graham that 
she would land back on TV 
with two shows? No The 
way we hear it, It was her 
astrologer 



MAZDA GLC 


DELUXE HATCHBACK 

Mantay . 3( an city 


SALE 

*4298 


FROM MAJOR League Baseball to CFL ... and dlan television viewer* throughout the 1978-79 season 
Hockey Night in Canada to Curling's four major bon on CBC television. (For story and pictures on CBC's 
spiels ... there's top sports entertainment for Cana- new fall schedule see Page I) 





SPORTS HIGHLIGHtS 


Football Canndlen — 5 p r 




SATURDAY 

Inner’Tennl* — 11 am 

(«) 

Baseball-II a m (3) 
Baseball - 11:13 a m (5) 
Rally Racing Fever —11:3® 
a m. (11). 

Sports — 12:30 p.m. (21). 
Women’s Senior “A” Soft- 
ball. 

Saturday Sport* — 1 p.m. 
(2, 6 ). Water-skiing cham¬ 
pionship*. 

UA Open Tennis — 1 p.m. 
(7) Early-round matches 
This Week In Baseball - 2 

p.m. (5). 

On the Sideline* with the 
Seahawks - 3 p.m. (5). 

NIX Game nf the Week — 4 

p.m. (4). 

W ide World of Sport* - 4 

t m (8). Little League base 
ill; swimming; diving. 

R.C. Futurity — 4:30 p.m. 

( 2 ). 

Wide World of Sports — 

4:30 p m. (4). Little League 
World Series. 

Hambletonlan — 5:45 p.m. 
t?) . Trotting’s premier 
event. 

College Football — 6 p.m. 
(4). Nebraska vs. Alabama 
Baseball — 8 p.m. (5). 
Mariners vs. Yankee*. 


SUNDAY 

On the Sideline* with the 
Seahawks — 9 a.Yn. (5). 

NFL Football — 10 a m 
(7). Rams vs. Eagles 
Football American — 10 
a m. (3). Les Oilers vs. les 
Falcons. 

Baseball - 11 a m (5). 
Mariners vs. Yankees. 

UA Open Tennis — 1 p m 
(7). Early round matches. 

NFL Football - 1:30 p m 
(5). Raiders vs. Broncos 
Sunday Sports — 2 p.m. 
(21). Equestrian compel! 
tions. 

Golf - 3:30 p m (4) U.S. 
Amateur Championship 
Rally Racing Fever — 4 
p m. (7). 

Pm Soccer — 5:30 p.m. 
(9) 

Jack Patera: Football — 6 

p.m. (5). 

MONDAY 

U.S. Open Tennis — 12 noon 
(7). Early-round matches. 

CFL Football — 1 p.m. ( 2 . 
6). Eskimos vs. Stampeders 
CFL Football -5 p.m. (8) 
Argonaut* vs. Tiger-Cats 
All-American Fuftirity — 5 
p.m. (11). From Ruidoso 
(N.M.) Downs. 


(3). Les Argonauts vs. les 
Tiger-Cats. 

NFL Football-7 p m (4). 
Colts vs. Cowbosy. 

UA Opea Tennis - 11:30 
p.m. (7. 12) Reporting the 

day’s results. 

\ 

TUESDAY 

CFL Football - 5 p m (2, 
6). Rough Riders vs. 
Alouettes. 

UA Opea Tennis — 11:30 
p.m. (7, 12). Reporting the 
day’s results 

WEDNESDAY 
Huskies la 70-7 p.m (4). 
The Wasingtort football team 
is profiled 

Baseball - 7:30 p m. (2.6). 
Brewers vs. Blue Jays. 



Baseball - 7 30 p m. (3). 
Les Mets vs les Expos. 

This Week la Baseball — 
10 30 p m. (2, 6). 

U.S. Open Tennis - 11:30 
p.m (7, 12) Reporting the 
day’s results. 

THURSDAY 

Fishing North America —0 

p.m. (12). 

Fishing Report — 0 p.m 

( 12 ) 

U.S. Open Tennis - 11:30 
p m. (7, 12). Reporting the 
day’s results. 

FRIDAY 

UA Opea Tennis — 11:30 
p.m. (7, 12). Reporting the 
day's results. 



circuit. 


Raw $4020 



Hamid Rabbin*, author <3 
that endless stream of best¬ 
selling novels, said recently 
that hfs wife Grace does’t 
mind when he travels around 
solo because her philanthro¬ 
pies keep her on the move 
also And do they ever. Last 
month she staged a gala In 
Cannes, France, to benefit 
the 150 orphan* whose bous¬ 
ing — and lives — she has 


With toads of 
standard aquipmant 
Fit __ 


pacicic 


ME and COMPA 

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INCOMPARABLE 


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The B.I.C. 920 has a low-mass tone arm which in¬ 
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through a sliding weight on the arm. Anti-skating is 
adjusted by a knot on the tone arm base Cueing is 
viscous damped up and down. Performance is 
comparable with other manual turntables which are 
much more expensive 


Model 940 

B.I.C. 940 has low-mass tone arm which in¬ 
corporates vertical tracking force adjustment in the 
isolated counter weight. It will track any cartridge, 
at the lowest setting recommended by the 
manufacturer Cueing is viscous damped up and 
down The Model 940 is designed to function with 
as fine a system as you choose to assemble and yet 
is priced modestly enough to be a logical choice 
for any system being put together on a strict 
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M od«l 981 

The B.I.C. 981 incorporates electronic speed con¬ 
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variable pitch control, with illuminated strobe, 
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B.I.C. 981 is the ultimate turntable for the most 
sophisticated system . combining the highest 
levels of playback performance with the option of 
manual or automatic record handling depending 
on the occasion and the desires of the owner 


$ 129 “ 


* 179 “ 


THE BEAM BOX 


Inside this box is the world s first elec¬ 
tronically directabte FM antenna B.I.C. 
invented it. It sits conveniently beside 
your receiver By simply adjusting its 
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FM signal coming from any direction. 


* 99 ” 


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m=«Mgi=r 

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With m# purchase of any of 
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B I C VENTURI speaker* combine high efficiency with 
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P 


The Formula 1 

is 8 2-way system with 8” high ' 
excursion woofer and full- 
range BIC ONEX horn assem¬ 
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The Formula 2 

is a 3-way system using a 
'heavy-duty 8 ’' woofer. 
BIC ONEX horn with midrange 
compression driver and a 
super tweeter for extended 
treble response 


Formula 3 






A long-throw 10” woofer is 
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BICONEX horn 


is.a 3-way system, employing a 
heavy-duty 10” woofer, 
midrange BICONEX horn 
assembly and super tweeter 


* 129 “ 


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The Formula 5 and Formula 7 speaker systems constitute s 
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SEA-2 


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Fifty years of technical innovation has put 
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The SEA-200 has seven frequency “tone-zone" con¬ 
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Th« KD-15 St#f#o Ceeeette D#ck 

The KO-15 is priced even lower than other JVC decks, 
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The KD-15 is s high value, high performance deck at s 


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Ordinary receivers have only two or three controls for tonal ad¬ 
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octave aessei-uenvea nign nner. 


NOW 


* 799 ®® 



1090 STEREO CONSOLE AMPLIFIER 
45 Watts par Cbauual lata • abas, MMhm 
* Output fruui 28 Hz tu 28 kttz, «Rb ae mere tbaa 0.1% Total 

Hanuuuk Disturbed. Full Complementary Direct Coupled Output 
Bass. Mid and Treble Controls. Two Tape Monitors High Filter 


? 




NOW 


HD440 HIGH DEFWmOH SPEAKER SYSTEM 

3-Way System incorporating an 6-inch Woofer. 3-inch Midrange 
id 34pdi Tw ‘ “ “ --- 


and 3-mch Tweeter. Power 
grated Program Material Frequency 
±3 dB 


NOW 


50 Watts late 
45 Hz to 18 kHz 


* 89 ®* 


6300 DC SERVO DIRECT DRIVE TURNTABLE 

DC Servo Dired Drive Motor System Pitch Controls with Strobe 
Auto-Uft and Shut-off Damped Cueing Anti- 
Dust Cover and Base 


NOW 



5480 STEREO CASSETTE OECK WITH DOLBY 

Dolby Noise Redudion System. Professional 3y*-inch VU Meters 
Peak LED Indicators Adive 4-Input Mixer with Pan Pots. Mic/ 
Line Mixing and Master Level Control 3-Position Tape EQ and 
Bias Seledor Ferrite Heads DC Servo Motor System 


NOW 


* 339 ®® 


I 





















































































































/ 


THE NAME IN CAR STEREO 


- i 


' ii 


Treat yourself to 
the great Craig 
Sound. 

Your car will love 
it too. 


OH/XICS Model T605 

New indash cassette player— 

stereo/matrix with AM/FM/MPX radio. 

• Separate balance and fader 

• Local distance switch 

• Automatic repeat 

• Stereo mono pushbutton Fast-forward and rewind 

DON’T MISS OUT ON 
THIS GREAT VALUE! 




* 174 “ 


This is the one 
you’ve 

been waiting 
for . . . 


Complete Entertainment 
at your 


Fingertips 


C/^/\IC3. s 
Model T632 / 


CfZ/ \IC3. 
T609 


Indash Stereo Cassette 
Player with AM/FM/MPX Radio 

Featuring ... 

• Locking fast forward and rewind 

• Volume, balance and tone controls 

• Local/distance switch 

• Small chassis 

• Also available for imported cars 
(smaller chassis) as model T608 


CJ^AIG. 

IN-DASH CASSETTE PLAYER 
PRESET PUSHBUTTON 
AM/FM/MPX RADIO 

• Auto reverse tor continuous play 

• Five preset pushbutton station tuning 

• Craig matrix tor 4-channel effect 

• Locking fast forward/rewind 

• Separate balance and fader 

• Separate stereo/mono and local/distance 
oontrols 




Indash Stereo Cassette Player 
with AM/FM/MPX Road-Rated Receiver 


* 189 " 


INCLUDES the T609 
and the 9420 Speakers 


$ 249 " 


4^#'I 


* 239 " 


Featuring... 

• Locking fast forward and rewind 

. • Volume, balance and tone controls 
* • Fader 

• LOC/DX and stereo/mono switches 


Dial-in-door tuning 
FM mute 

Power-off and full auto*eject 
Small chassis 


INCLUDES the T611 
and the V460 Speakers 


RATED RECEIVER 


T600 In-Dash Stereo Cassette Player with 
AM/FM Radio. Auto Reverse — Locking Fast 
Forward — Locking Rewind — Local Distance 
Switch for Better FM Reception Small Chassis 


NOW 


* 199 95 


T180 POWERPLAY Cassette Stereo Player. Re 

versible Quick-Retease Mounting — Auto Re¬ 
verse and Auto Eject — Fast Forward and Re 
wind — Fade Balance. Bass and Treble Con¬ 
trols — 12 Watts Continuous Power per 
Channel 
Price includes 
9430 

Speakers 


NOW 


$ 229 95 


v -"T -T T 

T102 Quick-Mount Auto-Reverse Stereo-Matrix 

Cassette Player. Automatic Reverse — Craig Mat 
nx for Synthesized Four-Channel Sound — Lock¬ 
ing Fast-Forwtrd/Rewmd — Slide-Out Bracket — 
Separate Balance. Fader Volume and Tone Con¬ 
trols 

INCLUDES the T102 and the 9414 Speakers 


Lc 

Price 

...wit 


• towmai'E* 

• Peak Lmtw 

• Tap* Sat* 


• mu! 84 


• .'Van-Spi 

• {Total m 
i [Cu# ao! 

• jintariod 

• Auto 14 

• MurropT 

• (Micropr 

• IBo-M-M 

• *u*_or« 

• (Too* *• 

• Vniartoc 

• (Oparat* 

• E«tema 

• locuyn 

• AC oc 

• Dual Fl 

• 4 Way 1 

• ,'Tap# C 


NOW 


$ 184 < 


9414 Deluxe Mobil* Twin 
Flush-Mount Spaakar KN. Full 
Spectrum Response — Dust 
Sealed Voice Coils — Moisture 
Resistant Cones — Padded 
Black Grilles — 8 Watts Peak 
per Speaker 

*27r 


9427 Custom Lin* Twin 
Flush-Mount Speeker Kit 

Flux-Suspension and 

Superior Linearity — Acoustic 
Lens Design for High Fre¬ 
quency Dispersion — Dome 
Radiator for Wider Response 
— 10 Watts Peak per Speaker 


$ 39r 


9420 Power play Twin Rush- 
Mount Speaker Ktt. Higher 

Efficiency — High- , 
Compliance Cloth Surround 
— Horn-Loaded Dome — High 
Frequency Radiator — 25 

Watt Peak per Speaker 


* 54 ” 


9430 Powerplay Deluxe 

Speaker Kl». Super Deluxe Car 
Speakers — Acoustically 
Damped Housing — 11 0 oz 
Magnet 5 v k Speaker — 
Naugahyde Exterior — 25 Watt 
Peak per Speaker 


* 79 ” 


V460 Custom POWERPLAY 
Mobile Coaxial Speaker KH. 

Fits Standard 6' x 9' Cutouts — 
Coaxially Mounted 3' Tweeter 

— Ail Weather Design — Flux 
Suspension — Superior Effi- 
cwncy — 10 oz Magnet (Sepa 
rate 1-1/2 oz Tweeter Magnet) 

— FuN 25 Watt Muse Power 


*99V 


R730 POWERPLAY Trans-Rib 
Wide Range Flush-Mount 
Speaker Kit. Trans-Rib Driver 
Produces Full Range from 60 10 
17 000Hz - Up to 50 Watts 
Muse Power per Channel - 20 
oz Magnet <n 66 oz System - 
Low-Profile Gn#e — t 4 Voce 
Coil on Teflon Bearing 




Sup' 


CRS-1 

The Supe 
system tti 
with an 4 
ding out 

boast a 
denser m 
give you 
stereo re 

most unit 


















































SUPERSCOPE 

Listen to us. 

Sup«r»cop«'s Miniature 
Action-Cordar for 
On-Tho-Qo Recording 

C-106 MWM«r Portakk Cassett Recorder 

For economy end versatility in a pocket-sized 
recorder, the C-106 has no equal For the ultimate 
in convenience when recording home movies 
lectures, sound effects and other special 
applications, use the C-106 with the optional 
Pistol Grip atari/stop accessory, the PG-6 
Also operates on AC with optional adapter 


• Built-m Condenser Microphone 

• Automatic Shot-Oft 

• Automatic Recording Level (ARL) 
) • Pushbutton Operation 


• Earphone Monitor Jack 

• Record Level'Battery Strength 
Meter 

• Operation in any carrying position 

• Prop-Up Cassette Etect 


A 




. 


• Locking Fast Forward and Rewind • N.-Cad Banery Pack (Optional) 

• Cue and Review • interlocking Pause Control 

• Tn-pod Mount (Included in Pnce) 

• Dual Flywheels • Batteries (4) 

• DC Servo-Control Motor • Earphone with Case 


Lowest 
Priced Deck 
...with Dolby. 


*59" 


This Deck Is Priced 
So Low, It's Like Getting 
the Dolby Free 


» Dolby Nows Reducuo* System VirtusSy Eiimmsws 
laps Hiss During Playback 
> usmn External Dolby Switching 


Standard or Chrormum Dioxide Casasnss 

• Locking Pause Control 

• iSummstsd Function Indicators hx Lmw 
Taps Sslsci Switch and Dolby 

• Saparsw Night and Lett Record Level Controls 

• Reedphone Monitor Jack 

• Uxrophona input Jacks 

• Ilhrse-Digtt Tsps Counter 

» ikummatad Tape Compartment 
i Interlocked Piano key Type ControN 

• uarge Slanted VU Meters 

• Record Mode indicator Light 

» tkainut Base end Patch Cords included 
► fju De-empne** Switch 


NOW 


M29" 


Seperscope AC DC Portable 
1e Re c order C 104 


• .Van-Speed Pitch Control 
4 |Totai Mechanism Shut-Oh (TMSl 
4 Cue and Raviaw 

4 'interlocking Record Mode 
4 Auto Level Recording 

: 'ophone and Auxiliary Inputs 
4 M'C'ophona and Auxiliary Inputs 

• Soth-in Condenser Microphone 

• iRn-ord Level and Battery Strength H 

• (Tone and Volume Controls 

• <imenocking Pauss Control 

operation m Any Carrying Position 
4 Enema! Speaker Jack 

ling Pas I Forward and Rewind 

• IAC DC Operation 
i Dual Flywheels 

• 4 Way Powan 

• Tape Counter 


A Feature Packed 
Semi-Profeesional 
Portable Caeeette 
Recorder. 

I 

C-104 

AC/DC Portable 
Cassette Recorder 
with Varl-Speed 

For the musician, businessperson, or anyone who 
expects maximum performance we proudly 
present the Superscope C-104 It has taatures 
never before found on a portsbte recorder to 
provide more versatility tor your recording needd 
which eat fois recorder apart from an others 


NOW 


*109 9 * 


Superscope Puts a Handle 
on Stereo. 

C RS-152 AM/KM Stereo Cassette Radio Recorder 

The Superscope CRS-152 is a unique AC'Battery portable 
system that combines a stereo cassette recording system 
with an AM FM Stereo Radio in one excistmg unit Roun¬ 
ding out the package are two detachable speakers that 
boast a Superscope patent-pending exclusive A con¬ 
denser microphone built into each detachable speaker to £ 
give you maximum spcaration and clarity for your live 
stereo recordings The Superscope CRS-152 is truly the 
most unique recorder of its kind available 


• Omnidirectional Elect'*! 
Condenser Microphones bum myo 
Detachable Speakers 

• Stereo FM Radio 

• AM Radio 

• Stereo Tap# Recorder 

• Stereo Caxeette Dec* 

• Stereo Tuner 

• Portable Stereo Muwc System 
■ 4-Way Powe' Ptug-.n Battery 

Car-Boat Adapter - Rechargeaowi 

• Automatic Record Level <ARt 

• AFC Switch 

• Var>*Me Sound Monitor 

• Record Battery Tuning Mew 

• Sleep Switch 


NOW 

149 


ONLY 

$ 469 95 


Model FB 443 


l 


Save money... 
save energy... with this 4 
20" XtendedLife RCA XL-100 color TV! 

Save when you buy and keep right on saving thanks to RCAs 
energy-efficient XtendedLife chassis 

Plus Super AccuColor black matrix picture 
tube for brilliant, natural color Automatic Color Control 
Automatic fleshtone Correction System and much, much 
more 1 C’mon in today this is the sale you've been waiting for! 


14 " 

R CA XL-100 


The sharpest, brightest 
small-screen color TV in 
RCA history 


See it now—the new RoomMate 
featuring RCAs XtendedLife chassis 


RCA s 100°o solid state XtendedLife 

chassis delivers excellent per¬ 
formance. yet uses surprisingly 
little power This means low stress 
on vital components for reliability 
and long life expectancy 

Low power consumption—uses less 
energy (on average) than a 75-watt 
light bulb 

RCA’s new AccuLine black matrix 
picture tube delivers a sharp 
bright, high-contrast picture 


Automatic Fine Tuning pinpoints and 
holds the correct broadcast signal 

ONLY 

* 379 “ 


jL 























































/ 



somd as clear as light' 



amMb 


Like all loudspeakers in the ESS amt line, the amt 1b is 
equipped with a specially designed Bextrene low 
frequency driver. In addition to the cf H-frame Bextrene 
driver, the amt 1b utilizes a 12” passive idiator. The com¬ 
bination of a Bextrene driver plus ^passive radiator 
eliminates the distortion added by a po'j or the loss of ef¬ 
ficiency caused by an acoustic suspe'-sion design. 

Its substantial, articulate bass response* is an appropriate 
counterpart to the Heil drivers inci^ve clarity in the 
higher registers. 



Heil dr-motion h-cnsformer 



The amt 1b utilizes a full-size 
Heil air-motion transformer in¬ 
corporating an improved 
focusing system. A small 
alteration has resulted in an 
audibly clearer, smoother per¬ 
formance. Frequencies above 
> 4.1 ,000 Hz are reproduced by the 
highly efficient Heil system 
shown. 


WALNUT VINYL FINISH 






>LS8 m, !■ p$9 

* 219 95 * 149 ** 


LS4 

* 399 ®* 


The Tempest line of clean, contemporary loud¬ 
speakers in golden oak by ESS are simply 
superb instruments. Functional by design and 
modest in size and cost, they possess the ob¬ 
vious mark of excellence — great reserve 
potential. They are true ESS systems, crafted 
to exacting standards of excellence 


SPECIFICATIONS 

LS • 

LS S 

LS 4 

FULL SYSTEM 




Power Capacity 

100 Wans (clean power) 

140 Wans (clean power) 

160 Watts (clean power) 

Nominal Impedance 

6 Ohms 

6 Ohms 

6 Ohms 

Dispersion 

120 horizontal 40 vertical 

12(7 horizontal. 40 vertical 

I20 c horizonta(. 40 vertical 

Crossover Frequency 

2400 Hz 

2400Hz 

2400 Hz 

Efficiency 

1 Watt input produces 94 dB 

1 Wan input produces 9* dB 

1 Wan input produces 96 dB 


of sound pressure at a 

of sound prasaura at a 

of sound pressure at a 


distance of 3 lest. 

distance of 3 feet. 

distance of 3 feet 


80 dB at 15 feet 

Si dB at 15 feet 

62 dB at 15 feet 

Ampl itude>Frequenc y 




Response 

50 Hz to 20kHz* 3dB 

40 Hz to 20 kHz ♦- 3 dB 

35 Hz to 24 kHz 4-. 3 dB 

LOW FREQUENCY DRIVER 




Nominal Diameter 

8 inches (20 ^ cm) 

10 inches (25 40 cm) 

10 inches (25 40 cm) 

Flux Density 

9.000 Gauss 

9.500 Gauss 

11.600 Gauss 

DECOR 




Finish 

Oak 

Oak 

Oak 

Grille Color 

Dark Brown 

Dark Brown 

Dark Brown 

Dimensions 

22 in H i 12 1/2 In W 

24 1/S in H x 14 In W 

35 in H x 12 1/Mn W 


s 10 5« m D 

x 14 in O 

x 12 1* m 0 


(55 9 x 31.1 x 27 cm) 

(61 3 x 35 6 x 35 6 cm) 

(88 9 x 31 75 x 306 cm) 





' s 4 











































COME IN AND SEE OUR 



VIDEO VALUES 


Tipct thowi you'rt watching 
Tapes shows on another channel 
Tapes shows when you're not Horn# 

It used to be only millionaires and movie stars 
could have a private showing of a 7 o clock 
show at midnight 

Now. anyone can set their own TV schedule 
with The Great Time Machine by Quasar 
The Great Time Machine is the remarkable 
home videotape recorder that lets you 
record programs off the air so you can watch 
them when you want to 
Now. you II never have to. miss a program 
because you can t be there to watch it 
A compatible timer (not included with the 
recorder) lets you automatically record 
programs when you re not home so you can 
watch them when you get back 
And when two of your favorite shows are 1 

on at the same time, you can watch one and 
record the other for viewing later 
The Great Time Machine by Quasar Use it 
for what you want most Great times When¬ 
ever you want them to happen 



UHoW Houwal 
Quasar v 

rw an wTwn rfxrtar 0 


Greatlime 
M achine 


w Quasar. 


NOW ONLY 


* 899 " 


1 hour tapes at $19.99 

2 hour tapes at $99.96 

Timer at $49.95 


JVC 


VIDSTAR VHS 

VIDEOCASSETTE RECORDER 



The easy to operate “Vidstar" has a search feature that 
allows you to return to a specific point in a recorded 
program and play back from that point automatically. 

The “Vidstar" comes equipped with a switchable chan¬ 
nel 3-channel 4 RF modulator. That means that you can 
play back your programs through almost any TV set on 
the unused channel setting in your city. 

And because of the Vidstar’s small size (IF/s” x 5 13 /i§" 
x 13 15 /i«") and stylish design, you'll find it makes an at¬ 
tractive addition to your family room or living room. 


* 1149 " 


2-hour tapes only 


WATCH THE SHOWS 
YOU WEREN’T 
HOME FOR 
AT A PRICE YOU 
WONT WANT TO MISS. 



With the new Sony Betamax SL8600, you can actually 
record your favorite shows when you’re not home. So 
then you can watch them when you get back. Betamax 
also records off one channel while you watch another, 
up to three hours in fact, with the new L750 Video Tape 
(limited quantities). And now. we’rto giving you a chance 
to get a Betamax SL8600 at a price you may not get a 
chance at again. 




Complete with 


2 - 3 hour tapes (L750) 

or 

3 - 2 hour tapes (L500) 


* 1195 * 


iHetamax ] “ITS A SONY” 



m 

m 


miss the good things on TV again. $ 

Sm any program whenever you want SeiectaVAsion 
records the program you re watching - plays back 
on any TV 

See what s on one station while SeiectaVAsion records 
another it's like having two TV tats 
See what you miss while you're asleep or away 
SelectaVision has a built-in timer you can preset 
(up to 24 hours in advance) tor automatic recording 
See yourself on TV' SeiectaVAsion has an optional 
black-and-white camera with built-in microphone 
You can make yourself a star 
Plus a remote peuee control for chairside editing 


Compfela with throe 2-hour tapes for 


* 1295 °° 

iiiiiiiiiriTTTriiiniT 


Extra 2-hour tapes at $29.95 
Optional Camera at $399.95 




V 





































































IN CONCERT - / 
CARNEGIE | | 
MALL — ^ 

George BensonB 
RCA ^ 


\ A MEMORIAL / 

• Glenn Miller m 
I & His Orch. ■ 
/ RCA \ 


SPOTLIGHT 

Nana 

Mouskouri 

LONCK>N 


A CHORUS 
LINE — 

Original 

Cast 

CBS 


Original 

Soundtrack 

MCA 


LOVE 

LETTERS 

Engelbert 

Humperdinck 

LONDON 


THE EYES OF g 
LAURA MARS | 

Original 

Soundtrack \ 
CBS 1 


INSIGHTS 

Akiyoshi - 
Tabackm 
Big Band 
RCA 


GREASE - 

Original 

Soundtrack 

POLYDOR 


FOUR * 

Bob James | 
RCA t 


A CANADIAN 
TRIBUTE — 

Elvis 

Presley 

RCA 


THANK GOD 

rrs 

FRIDAY — 

Original 

Soundtrack 

POLYDOR 


STAR WARS 

Original 

Soundtrack 

Iqrt f 


PaulAnka 


Listen To Your Heart 


MODERN 

MAN 

Stanley 

Clarke 

CBS 


ELECTRIC * 
GUITARIST | 

John a 

McLaughlin # * 
CBS 


AMERICAN 

GRAFFITI - 

Original 

Soundtrack 

GRT 


fnhiun Murfriv i* LVniecr W’tllumn 


THAT S WHAT 4 
FRIENDS ARE | 
FOR — 

Johnny Mathis^ 
Williams ^ 

CBS 


THE KOLN 
CONCERT 

Keith 

Jarrett 

POLYDOR 


SOLO 

CONCERTS 

Keith 

Jarrett 

POLYDOR 


THE BUDDY 

HOLLY 

STORY 

Original 

Soundtrack 

CBS 


SATURDAY 

NIGHT 

FEVER 

Original 

Soundtrack 

POLYDOR 


ORIGINAL CAST 
SOUNDTRACKS 


JAZZ - JAZZ VOCAL 


i 





































VOCAL 




SPECIALS 


—WHILE QUANTITIES LAST— 


THE BEST OF 

Roger f 

Whittaker 
RCA 


LI 

CANON DE 
PACHELBEL| 

MauhC# 4, ASS > 
Andre # 

RCA ^ mm* 



BEETHOVEN: 
THE NINE 
SYMPHONIES B 

Karajan. “ 
Berlin Philh. 
DGG-Polydor 



LOVE 
GOES ON 

Nana 

Mouakouri 

LONDON 



rrs a 
HEARTACHE | 

Bonnie 
Tyler 
RCA * 



FANFARES 
SYMPHONIES 

Lully,''Mouret 
RCA % 




BARBRA 
STREISANH 
SOVJBIRDi 



SONGBIRD—/ 

Barbra 
Streisand 

CBS \ 5 2# / 



CONCC* 

Vladimir 

pjaovrrz 

NEW H.KK HMHARMOMC 
0JGLNE QiMWO 

KVHMWIVVI 
a'V LKIOV' i 



Saarland 
Mandonin 
Orchestra 
DGG-Polydor 


JEAN HERRE RAMRAL Burnt 
SUITE FotRUTE 
and JAZZ PIANO 
CLAUDE BOLLING, 



HEART 

BREAKER 

Dolly 

Parton 

RCA 




SUITE FOR 
FLUTE A 
JAZZ PIANO I 

Rampal \ 5 9 ®* 

Bolling % w 

CBS ^ * 


JAPANESE 

MELODIES 

Jean-Pierre 

Rampal 

CBS 


869 Ann* Murray/Glen Campbell 

1 M 

ea 

2030 Low David Bowie 

2.M 

ea 

1694 Spirit John Denver 

2.M 

ea. 

4S6 The Best of the Three Dof Night 

3.M 

ea 

6451 Turn On Rolf Harris 

1.** 

ea. 

11553 The Best of the Band 

2.** 

ea 

11462 Solid Silver Quicksilver Messenger Service 

2.** 

ea 

3422 Blast From Your Past Rmgo Starr 

2 .»* 

ea 

11577 The Best of Glen Campbell 

2," 

ea. 

11578 The Best of George Harrison 

2.** 

ea 

423 Fantastic Gordon Lightfoot (2 IP set) 

4.** 

ea set 

77032 The Rod Stewart Collection (2-LP set) 

4.** 

ea set 

78036 Disco Fever (2 LP set) 

1." 

ea set 

MAM7 I’m a Writer — Gilbert O’Sullivan 

1.** 

ea 

26516 The Fabulous Charlie Rich 

1." 

ea 

1206 Connie Smith s Greatest Hits 

1.** 

ea 

1786 Winners and Other Losers Bobby Bare 

1.»* 

ea 

2147 Rock the Boat Hues Corporation 

I.” 

ea 

1817 Eddy Eddy Arnold 

1.** 

ea 

0033 Vicki Leandros 

1.9* 

ea 

1861 Both Barrels Jerry Reed 

1.** 

ea 

237 The Very Best of Cher 

1.** 

ea 

11127 It's Not Love Merle Haggard 

2.** 

ea 

79312 Moonshot Buffy Saint Mane 

2.** 

ea 

79284 Nashville Ian & Sylvia 

2.** 

ea 

7042 Disco Soul Var Artists 

2.** 

ea 

3418 Darkhorse George Harrison 

2.** 

ea. 

3417 Goodnight Vienna Ringo Starr 

2.w 

ea 

5502 Nice n Nasty Salsoul Orch 

2.** 

ea 

1351 Afternoon Delight Starland Vocal Band 

1.** 

ea 

9490 Rough Diamond 

1.** 

ea 

0192 Back Home at the Opry George Hamilton fi 

1.** 

ea 

0154 Early Riser T.H.P Orch 

1.H 

ea 

11561 For the 83rd Time Tennessee Ernie Ford 

1.** 

ea 

0169 Summer Nights David Amram 

1.** 

ea 

1829 Yicki Sue Robinson 

1.«* 

ea 

1496 Morris Albert 

2.4* 

ea 

0501 Rock Your Baby George McCrea 

1.** 

ea 

2211 Can t Let You Go John Travolta 

1.** 

ea 

1225 Steppin Out Gary Stewart 

1.** 

ea. 

1213 The Best of Porter Wagoner 

4.** 

ea 

77029 Superstars of the 100th Year 

2.** 

•a.. 

11601 Southern Nights Glen Campbell 

3.** 

ea 

11264 Entertainer of the Year Roy Clark (2 LP set) 

3.** 

ea set 

11357 Round No 1 Frank Sinatra (2 LP set) 

2.- 

ea set 

31 Capricorn Princess Esther Phillips 

2.** 

ea 

35 Tico Rico Hank Crawford 

2.** 

ea 

1378 Buck A Bud Pizzarelli/Freeman 

2.9# 

ea 

27 House of The Rising Sun Idris Muhammad 

2." 

ea 

23 What a Difference a Day Makes Esther Phillips 

2.** 

ea 

30 Shoogte Wanna Boogie David Matthews 

2.** 

ea. 

26 1 Hear a Symphony Hank Crawford 

• 2.** 

ea 

11589 First Cosins Jazz Ensemble 

3.** 

ea 

0290 Lullabys. Legends A Lies Bobby Bare (2 LP set) 

1.** 

ea set 

1450 The Whispers 

I.t* 

ea 

36074 Palm Leaf Rag Southland Stingers 

1.** 

ea. 

1827 Life Goes On Faith. Hope A Charity 

1.” 

ea 

352 The Life of Ctmst Roland Hayes 

1.** 

ea 

11588 Holly Days Denny Laine 

2.** 

ea 

11214 Moondog Matinee The Band 

1.** 

ea 

1558 Music Maximus The Mam Ingredient 

1.** 

ea 

1159 The Best of Dinah Shore 

1.M 

ea 

1187 Don t Stop Now The Brothers 

1.»* 

ea 

1402 Disco Express 

.39 

ea 

3007 Where Did Our Love Go Donnie Elbert 

.39 

ea 

10118 Morgan 

.39 

ea 

754170/Give More Power to The People The Chthtes 

.39 

ea 

403 Teardrops Keep Failin' Chuck Jackson 

2.** 

ea 

28893 Tanzhits Hugo Strasser Orch 

1.** 

ea 

735 Hag Merle Haggard 

1.** 

ea 


V 




























































r*5> 


“IT’S A SONY” 


ICF-7370W 


• PSB FM AM portable features all the Sony 
engmeenng advances you need to enioy 
super-clear receptionr 

FET RF amplifier for super sensitive and 
super selective PSB'FM reception 
Battery or AC operation with built-in AC 
cord (batteries not supplied) 

PSB squelch control 
for noise-free reception 
Built-in AFC for drift- 
free FM 


Little Sony. 

Big deal 

Sony has • pocketful of miracles 
This one's a pocket-sized AM radio that looks as 
good as it sounds 

And if you think that's good, get a load of the 
pncetaa. 

Qome in now Don't 
keep a big deal 


We want you to go 
home with a Sony m 
your pocket. And 



*••••«!•••• 

Igffiiii 

?••••••, 1 

1 

I:::-:: 

:::::::: 


$ 12 “ 


ICF-9530W 

• Modern FM AM table radio with pedestal base 
adds a note of elegance to any room 

• Built-in AFC lets you enjoy drift-free FM 

• Transformer less, capacitor coupled solid state 
circuitry for low distortion and wide frequency 
range 

• Slide rule tuning (or fast, 
precise station selection 

e External antenna terminal 
for the best reception 




THE CLOCK RADIO 
THAT DOESN’T GO 
TO SLEEP TILL YOU DO. 


It's a Sony ICF-C806W Dream Machine. With a special 
Sleep Timer that automatically ahpts off the radio a lit¬ 
tle while after you go to sleep it also has both FM and 
AM tuning, built-in AFC for drift-free FM reception, a 
touch sensitive Dream Bar for a few extra minutes of 
sleep, a 24-hour preset alarm system and both a buzzer 
and radio alarm So with this 
ICF-C806W. you can not only 
fall asleep to your favourite 
music, but wake up to it as well 


ICF-C800W 

• FM.'AM clock radio in angle-adjustable cabinet 

• Noiseless all-electronic LED-display Digital clock 

• 24-hour alarm preset system turns buzzer or 
radio alarm on automatically at the same time 
each day 

• Adjustable Sleep Timer turns radio off 
automatically after up to 59 minutes 

• Repeat Bar gives an extra tew minutes sleep in 
the morning 

• Seconds Reset’ control for precision time ad¬ 
justment 

• Built-in AFC for drift-free 
FM reception 

• Powerful 3>/•*’ dynamic 
speaker for full, rich sound 


$0495 


* 


maxell 


/ 







Today. Maxell cassettes—as in other areas of tape 
technology—are the standard by which other 
tapes, and often even the tape recorders them¬ 
selves are judged The reasons include the tape 
within the cassette, as well as the cassette shells. 
Unlike open reel, cassettes are entire tape systems 
within themselves, combining the need for superior 
tape plus a high degree of craftsmanship when 
creating and assembling the shell itself 


LENGTH 

ceo 

C90 

MAXELL LN (Low Noise) 

High performance for general recording uses. 

1" 

£49 

MAXELL UD (Ultra-Dynamic) 

For bi~fi music recording and 
other high quality applications. 

3“ 

3” 

MAXELL UD-XLI 

Super-premium cassette at Sormal or t.H position. 

(Sor null huts and 120 ps equalization) 

3“ 

5«® 

MAXELL UD-XLII 

Super-premium cassette at Chrome position 
(High level htas and 70 ps equalization) 

3" 

5«® 

1 \ 

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PACKAGE POWER 


JVC 


Closer To The 
Musical Truth 




JVC brings you the Musical Truth and here is the truth about it With 18 
Watts RMS power per channel and no more than 0.8% Total Harmonic 
Distortion. The JVC JR-S61W Receiver places the maximum design 
emphasis on ease of operation The JVC SK-500 Speaker features the 
new Wide-Range Cone Tweeter that includes a specially treated dia¬ 
phragm and superalloy cap The cabinetry is solid and sturdy & de¬ 
signed to give maximum throughout its 40 to 20.000 Hz. range And 
when it comes to turntables, the JVC JL-A20 has got it all With auto¬ 
return belt-drive and all controls grouped to the right side for ease 
this turntcoie offers precision and convenience 


NOW 


499 


.95 


COMPLETE 


SUPERSCOPE 

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JVC PE 



SUPERSCOPE Receivers are designed and built by the same 
people who make MARANTZ. That means you get the same 
high quality with the Model R1220 as with the more expensive 
MARANTZ Receivers. 10 watts per channel into 8 ohms. RMs, 
with no more than 0.9% total harmonic distortion assure 
clean sound. The PE Turntable is created in Germany and of¬ 
fers full automatic features plus variable speed control and 
cueing. JVC’s SK33 Loudspeakers are the ideal match to 
complete this system which provides remarkable sound at an 
even more remarkable price! 


NOW 


*299 


95 


COMPLETE 



With SUPERSCOPE Receivers you get the same technical ex¬ 
pertise and craftsmanship that m?ke MARANTZ the finest 
audio equipment in the world. And with the Model R1240 you 
get 20 watts per channel into 8 ohms, RMs, with no more than 
0.9% total harmonic distortion. Also two speaker systems 
selector switch and tape monitor switch. JVC’s JLA20 Turn¬ 
table is one of the most popular on the market and it’s top 
rated performance and excellent price are the reasons for this 
popularity. The KLH 300 speaker systems are budget priced, 
but yet outperform many speakers costing much more. All in 
all. some solid performers at a sale price. 


NOW 


$ 399 95 


COMPLETE 


© YAMAHA audio 

FULL FIVE YEAR WARRANTY 





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The CR220 »s YAMAHA s lowest priced receiver y* 
produces less thanj OOS total harmonic distortion 
watts per hannei RMS Also features terminals to r 
of speakers FM mating and stereo headphone \3 
YP2H rs a special blend of all it takes to make a ga 
table Attractive styling precision automatic controls 
ful motor and sensitive S-tvpe tonearnj And the NS2 
monitor speakers provide solid, accurate music a T n 
from a whisper to disco-loud' 


NOW 


COMPLETE 


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